AURORA | Protesting the direction of the country under President Donald Trump, people gathered Saturday in the nation’s capital and communities across the U.S. for ” No Kings ” demonstrations โ€” what the president’s Republican Party is calling “Hate America” rallies.

Saturday marks the second โ€œNo Kingsโ€ protest and the third mass movement against the administration this year. The protests come amid intensifying conflict between federal law enforcement and protesters nationwide. Some conservative politicians have condemned the protests as โ€œHate Americaโ€ rallies, while others see them as a fight for First Amendment rights. Protests are planned in over 2,500 locations, from major cities to rural communities.

In Aurora, a protest is slated for 1 p.m. – 3 p.m. at the northeast corner of South Parker Road and South Havana Street, according to local and national organizers.

โ€œOur peaceful movement is only getting bigger and stronger,โ€ organizers said in a statement. โ€œโ€˜NO KINGSโ€™ is more than just a slogan โ€” itโ€™s the foundation our nation was built upon. Born in the streets, carried by millions in chants and on posters, it echoes from city blocks to rural town squares, uniting people across this country to fight dictatorship together.โ€

National organizers say about 60 protests are scheduled for Saturday across the state, including a large protest at the state Capitol, scheduled for 1 p.m. – 4 p.m.

This is the third mass mobilization since Trump’s return to the White House and comes against the backdrop of a government shutdown that not only has closed federal programs and services, but is testing the core balance of power as an aggressive executive confronts Congress and the courts in ways that organizers warn are a slide toward American authoritarianism.

Trump himself is away from Washington at his Mar-a-Lago home in Florida.

“They say they’re referring to me as a king. I’m not a king,” Trump said in a Fox News interview airing early Friday, before he departed for a $1 million-per-plate MAGA Inc. super PAC fundraiser at Mar-a-Lago. Protests are expected nearby Saturday.

More than 2,600 rallies are planned Saturday in cities large and small, organized by hundreds of coalition partners.

A growing opposition movement

While the earlier protests this year โ€” against Elon Musk’s cuts in spring, then to counter Trump’s military parade in June โ€” drew crowds, organizers say this one is building a more unified opposition movement. Top Democrats such as Senate Leader Chuck Schumer and Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders are joining in what organizers view as an antidote to Trump’s actions, from the administration’s clampdown on free speech to its military-style immigration raids.

“There is no greater threat to an authoritarian regime than patriotic people-power,” said Ezra Levin, a co-founder of Indivisible, among the key organizers.

As Republicans and the White House dismiss the protests as a rally of radicals, Levin said their own sign-up numbers are growing. Organizers said rallies are being planned within a one-hour drive for most Americans.

Rallies were held in major European cities, where gatherings of a few hundred Americans chanted slogans and held signs and U.S. flags.

‘Crooks and conmen’ and fears of police response

Retired family doctor Terence McCormally was heading to Arlington National Cemetery to join up with others Saturday morning and walk across the Memorial Bridge that enters Washington directly in front of the Lincoln Memorial. He thought the protests would be peaceful but said the recent deployment of the National Guard makes him more leery about the police than he used to be.

“I really don’t like the crooks and conmen and religious zealots who are trying to use the country” for personal gain, McCormally said, “while they are killing and hurting millions of people with bombs.”

Republicans denounce ‘Hate America’ rallies

Republicans have sought to portray participants in Saturday’s rallies as far outside the mainstream of American politics, and a main reason for the prolonged government shutdown, now in its 18th day.

From the White House to Capitol Hill, GOP leaders disparaged the rallygoers as “communists” and “Marxists.”

They say Democratic leaders, including Schumer, are beholden to the far-left flank and willing to keep the government shut down to appease those liberal forces.

“I encourage you to watch โ€” we call it the Hate America rally โ€” that will happen Saturday,” said House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La.

“Let’s see who shows up for that,” Johnson said, listing groups including “antifa types,” people who “hate capitalism” and “Marxists in full display.”

In a Facebook post, former presidential contender Sanders said, “It’s a love America rally.”

“It’s a rally of millions of people all over this country who believe in our Constitution, who believe in American freedom and,” he said, pointing at the GOP leadership, “are not going to let you and Donald Trump turn this country into an authoritarian society.”

Democrats try to regain their footing

Democrats have refused to vote on legislation that would reopen the government as they demand funding for health care. Republicans say they are willing to discuss the issue later, only after the government reopens.

But for many Democrats, the government closure is also a way to stand up to Trump, and try to push the presidency back to its place in the U.S. system as a co-equal branch of government.

The situation is a potential turnaround from just six months ago, when Democrats and their allies were divided and despondent, unsure about how best to respond to Trump’s return to the White House. Schumer in particular was berated by his party for allowing an earlier government funding bill to sail through the Senate without using it to challenge Trump.

In April, the national march against Trump and Elon Musk had 1,300 registered locations. In June, for the first “No Kings” day, there were 2,100 registered locations.

“What we are seeing from the Democrats is some spine,” Levin said. “The worst thing the Democrats could do right now is surrender.”

House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries said he wasn’t sure if he would join the rallygoers Saturday, but he took issue with the Republicans’ characterization of the events.

“What’s hateful is what happened on January 6th,” he said, referring to the 2021 Capitol attack, as Trump’s supporters stormed the building to protest Joe Biden’s election victory. “What you’ll see this weekend is what patriotism looks like.”


Riddle reported from Montgomery, Alabama. Associated Press writer Chris Megerian contributed.

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3 Comments

  1. “No Kings” from the same people who say that “democracy is in crisis/danger” if their team doesn’t have complete political hegemony.

  2. Again, the bias of the Sentenil is active in this article too. Itโ€™s more of a rallying cry than a news story. To me, this rally should have been held four years ago when the Biden administration was rampantly censoring anyone who disagreed with itโ€™s policies or disproven pseudoscience. Talk about trampling our constitutional rights. Where were the protesters then? I believe the Dem institution is now the same as a blind cult. A great example is the Dem fight, not protest, to prevent the legal removal of criminals back to their country of origin. Never stop asking whyโ€ฆ

  3. Interesting location for the Aurora protest. NE corner Parker and Havana. Is that private property a commercial building complex Wells Fargo Banks, etc that operate in there? I guess the property owners and the business must approve? On the other hand, this event was a one-day opportunity to rent out their land at a premium. Now if the City of Aurora was on the ball and audited how this went down, the city should have some income to be able to collect taxes on. Knowing the city, that’s too much work.

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