A man dressed as โ€œOogie Boogieโ€ from โ€œThe Nightmare Before Christmas.โ€ during an Oct. 18 No Kings protest in Aurora on the corners of Havana Street and Parker Road. PHOTO BY CASSANDRA BALLARD

A third round of “No Kings” protests is coming this spring, with organizers saying they are planning their largest demonstrations yet across the United States to oppose what they describe as authoritarianism under President Donald Trump.

Aurora and Denver held the rallies last year, but it was unclear immediately what organizers had planned for March 28.

Previous rallies have drawn millions of people, and organizers said they expect even greater numbers on March 28 in the wake of Trump’s immigration crackdown in Minneapolis, where violent clashes have led to the death of two people.

“We expect this to be the largest protest in American history,” Ezra Levin, co-executive director of the nonprofit Indivisible, told The Associated Press ahead of Wednesday’s announcement. He predicted that as many as 9 million people will turn out.

“No Kings” protests, which are organized by a constellation of groups around the country, have been a focal point for outrage over Trump’s attempts to consolidate and expand his power.

“This is in large part a response to a combination of the heinous attacks on our democracy and communities coming from the regime, and a sense that nobody’s coming to save us,” Levin said.

Last year, Trump said he felt attendees were “not representative of the people of our country,” and he insisted that “I’m not a king.”

‘No Kings’ shifts focus after Minneapolis deaths

The latest round of protests had been in the works before the crackdown in Minneapolis. However, the killing of two people by federal agents in recent weeks has refocused plans.

Levin said they want to show “support for Minnesota and immigrant communities all over” and oppose “the secret police force that is murdering Americans and infringing on their basic constitutional rights.”

“And what we know is, the only way to defend those rights is to exercise them, and you do that in nonviolent but forceful ways, and that’s what I expect to see in ‘No Kings’ three,” Levin said.

Trump has broadly defended his aggressive deportation campaign and blamed local officials for refusing to cooperate. However, he’s more recently signaled a shift in response to bipartisan concern over the killing of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis on Saturday.

Previous ‘No Kings’ protests have drawn millions across the US

In June, the first “No Kings” rallies were organized in nearly 2,000 locations nationwide, including cities, towns and community spaces. Those protests followed unrest over federal immigration raids and Trump’s deployment of the National Guard and Marines to Los Angeles, where tensions escalated with protesters blocking a freeway and setting vehicles on fire.

They were organized also in large part to protest a military parade in the nation’s capital that marked the Army’s 250th anniversary and coincided with Trump’s birthday. “No Kings” organizers at the time called the parade a “coronation” that was symbolic of what they characterized as Trump’s growing authoritarian overreach.

In response, some conservative politicians condemned the protests as “Hate America” rallies.

During a second round of protests in October, organizers said demonstrations were held in about 2,700 cities and towns across the country. At the time, Levin pointed to Trump’s sweeping immigration crackdown, his unprecedented promises to use federal power to influence midterm elections, restrictions on press freedom and retribution against political opponents, steps he said cumulatively represented a direct threat to constitutionally protected rights.

On social media, both Trump and the official White House account mocked the protests, posting computer-generated images of the president wearing a crown.

The big protest days are headline-grabbing moments, but Levin said groups like his are determined to keep up steady trainings and intermediate-level organizing in hopes of growing sustainable resistance to the Trump administration’s actions.

“This isn’t about Democrats versus Republicans. This is about do we have a democracy at all, and what are we going to tell our kids and our grandkids about what we did in this moment?” Levin said. “I think that demands the kind of persistent engagement. “


Meg Kinnard can be reached at http://x.com/MegKinnardAP

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10 Comments

  1. Hopefully, this time they will make it more family-friendly by having face painting, rides and contests for the best costumes and most outrageous signs.

  2. Speaking of No Kings, can we remove the Governor’s authority to appoint board members to regional tax districts? I can’t find in the state constitution where Denver is annointed as the center of a colonial Empire sucking commerce and tax revenue from surrounding counties and controlled by the Governor, a state officer with jurisdiction over state-level matters?

    The Denver Scientific and Cultural Facilities District has been sodomizing Aurora’s economy and culture for nearly four decades. And for context, didn’t the current Governor recently arranged for a $35 million state grant so his hometown can host a snooty film festival one week per year? While Aurora has the Fox Theater and the blight that surrounds it?

    The Denver SCFD collects over $8 million per year in Aurora. And we have the Fox Theater. Ponzi scheme, straight up.

    1. She might also be raped or killed by an illegal alien. Life is full of risks. Endangering police increases them.

        1. No they don’t. That is just Democrat propaganda. Studies suggesting this were done before Biden opened the gates to millions of unvetted illegals. Venezuela’s prison population is currently residing in the U.S. Do another study and watch the results.

  3. I grew up in Denver between the โ€˜40s and โ€˜70s and watched the cultural opportunities grow and develop into the wide variety of activities and events offered in Denver today.

    I moved to Aurora in 1976, and was sadly disappointed by the lack of interest in cultural opportunities. Instead, Aurora only seems interested in developing athletic and recreational activities. I still drive to Denver and other surrounding suburbs to satisfy my interest in cultural events.

  4. Did you see the video showing Alex Pretti’s interaction with ICE a few days before the shooting. Turns out he wasn’t the sweet little nurse he was presented as. Turns out he was a violent left-wing thug who after his first assault on ICE, then showed up with a loaded semi-automatic pistol with two extra loaded magazines prepared for a shootout with ICE. While this did not justify his shooting, let’s be clear about the kind of person we are talking about. These are the kinds of people ICE has to deal with daily; with no help from the police.

      1. He did not pull his gun from what I saw. A former police officer once told me that there is nothing that scares an officer more than hearing another officer hollar “GUN! GUN!” I suspect two officers who shot him panicked and fired out of fear.

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