Protests from Alabama to Wyoming — and on the Arctic Circle: What to know about Saturday’s third ‘No Kings’ rally

Protests from Alabama to Wyoming — and on the Arctic Circle: What to know about Saturday's third 'No Kings' rally

Millions of people are expected to join a national rally on Saturday to protest President Donald Trump's policies,the higher cost of livingand the war against Iran, event organizers say.

CNN People attend a "No Kings" protest in Times Square in New York City on October 18, 2025. - Eduardo Munoz/Reuters

More than 3,100 "No Kings" demonstrations – about as many events as there arecountiesin the US – are expected in all fifty states,including an Alaskan city inside the Arctic Circle, fueled by a suburban groundswell of support.

"The people of America are pissed" and "are the ones powering this movement," organizer Sarah Parker, a national coordinator with grassroots movement 50501, who helped organize the events, said at a No Kings Coalition news conference on Thursday.

Nearly7 million peopleattended thousands of "No Kings" events nationwide last fall,organizers said, before clashes overthe Trump administration's immigration enforcement crackdownhad reached a frenzy.

Since then, Trump's nationwide immigration enforcement blitz has come and gone in several major cities, leaving behindmarred communitiesand two Americans dead through the actions of federal law enforcement. Now, Americans are facing skyrocketing gas prices and aflagging economydue to thewar with Iran.

A suburban show of support

Two-thirds of the people who have RSVPed for this weekend's event live outside of major urban centers, up nearly 40 percent compared with the first "No Kings" event in June 2025, statistics provided by the organizers show.

Racial diversity and rising educational levels have resulted inthe political axis shiftingin many suburban communities.

"I'm seeing people from the PTA or the neighborhood who would have never joined a protest in the past, who are now asking how they can get involved,"Allison Posner, a 42-year-old mother from Maplewood, New Jersey, told The Associated Press."This is not some other people's fight. This is our fight."

Allison Posner, an organizer for an upcoming "No Kings" protest poses for a photo on the steps of the town hall in Maplewood, New Jersey. - Seth Wenig/AP

The "No Kings" organizers also said a significant number of protests are planned in GOP stronghold states like Texas and Florida.

"Almost 50% of No Kings events are in either a red state or a battleground area for this year," Eunic Epstein-Ortiz, who is with the No Kings Coalition, said at the news conference on Thursday.

The No Kings Coalition organizes the demonstrations and includes organizations like 50501, Indivisible, AFT, MoveOn, the ACLU, Public Citizen and SEIU, among others.

Texas, Florida and Ohio each have over 100 events scheduled for Saturday, and states like Idaho, Wyoming and Utah have events in the double digits, according to the event organizers.

"We're seeing huge RSVP surges in highly competitive bellwether suburban areas," said Leah Greenberg, co-executive director of the Indivisible Project, the nonprofit organizing the protest. "Voters who decide elections, the people who do the door knocking and the voter registration and all of the work of turning protest into power, they are taking to the streets right now and they are furious."

The Twin Cities back in focus

Theflagship "No Kings" protestwill be a star‑studded lineup of cultural icons and political leaders rallying at the Minnesota State Capitol in St. Paul, with an expected in attendance of at least 100,000 people, according to a "No Kings" organizer.

Minneapolis and St. Paul were the epicenter of Operation Metro Surge, thelargest immigration enforcement operationin US history, that led to weeks of protest in the Twin Cities over the winter, particularly after federal agents fatally shotRenee GoodandAlex Pretti.

Federal agents usedpepper balls, tear gas and pepper sprayagainst protesters during these clashes, and images from the confrontations promptedconcerns from some Trump administration officials over the optics of the immigration crackdown, leading to thewithdrawal of some federal law enforcement personnelfrom the Twin Cities.

US Border Patrol agents stand guard at the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in the Minneapolis area on January 8, 2026, the day after Renee Good's death. - Charly Triballeau/AFP/Getty Images

This Saturday's protest, the first major one expected since Operation Metro Surge wound down last month, has a much different tone – music legend Bruce Springsteen is expected to perform, and demonstrators are encouraged to bring sunscreen.

"Minnesotans have already shown we'll stand up for democracy in -10° weather, so Saturday should be a breeze! Expect a beautiful spring afternoon and don't forget the SPF,"organizers for this Saturday's event joked, referencing the thousands of people who spilled onto Minneapolis' streets insubfreezing temperaturesto protest Immigration and Customs Enforcement presence in the city in January.

The rally at the Minnesota State Capitol on Saturday afternoonwill feature speakers and performersincludingfamed folk singer and activistJoan Baez,award-winning actress and activistJane Fonda, singer Maggie Rogers and political figures such as Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders, Minnesota Lt. Governor Peggy Flanagan and Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison.

People gathered in front of the Minnesota State Capitol during a demonstration over the fatal shooting of Renee Good on January 9. - Charly Triballeau/AFP/Getty Images

Springsteen, one ofAmerica's greatest song writers and musicians, told theMinnesota Star-Tribunethis week that he decided to perform his "Streets of Minneapolis" at the flagship "No Kings" event.

The anti-ICE song was released earlier this year and the musiciandedicated the songto the city's residents, including Pretti and Good.

Leaders call for peace

A core principle behind all "No Kings" events, organizers say, is "a commitment to nonviolent action." Participants should not bring any weapons to the events and are urged to act lawfully and de-escalate any potential confrontation.

"Peaceful resistance is the antidote to repression. And it's the antidote to the despair and powerlessness that repression is trying to make us feel," said ACLU Chief Political and Advocacy Officer Deirdre Schifeling at the news conference on Thursday.

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Tens of thousandsof people showed up for the first "No Kings" rallies last June. Theevents coincidedwitha military paradein Washington, DC, to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the US Army, which was also President Donald Trump's 79th birthday.

While the protests were largely peaceful, someprotesters clashed with policein downtown Los Angeles ahead of a nighttime curfew. Protests against Trump's immigration crackdown and the deployment of the National Guard in LAwere a flashpointat that time. Other pockets of violence, including adeadly shooting, and arrests were alsoreported throughout the country.

The second round of "No Kings" events last October were also peaceful for the most part, withpolice reporting very few incidents or arrests in large cities. Those protests took place in the shadow of what would become thelongest government shutdown in history, lasting for 43 days.

People demonstrate at a "No Kings" protest at Waterfront Park in Portland, Oregon, on October 18, 2025. - John Rudoff/Reuters

Demonstratorsvoiced outrageat a range of Trump's policies but some key themes took center stage, including perceived threats to democracy, the administration'sICE raidsandtroop deploymentsin US cities, and cuts to federal programs, especially health care.

This week in Minnesota, the St. Paul Police Department said it is preparing for Saturday's protests like they do for all special events.

"Obviously, public safety is our number one concern," Jesse Mollner, senior commander with St. Paul Police Special Operations Unit,told CNN affiliate WCCO. "We want to make sure that we hold a safe event … we want to mitigate any sort of risk associated with large-scale events."

"We support their rights but we also expect them to be lawful obviously."

What Trump has said about the protests

When asked about Saturday's "No Kings" events, White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said on Thursday, "The only people who care about these Trump Derangement Therapy Sessions are the reporters who are paid to cover them."

In the past, Trump and Vice President JD Vance haveresponded with mockeryto the events.

They both posted AI memes to social media depicting Trump in a crown.Trump shareda mocked-up vision of himself flying a fighter jet emblazoned with "KING TRUMP" appearing to dump raw sewage on protesters. In Vance'ssocial media post,prominent Democrats knelt as supplicants in a royal court before Trump.

The president also called October's mass protests a "joke" and described them as "very small, very ineffective." The people who took part were "whacked out," Trump said.

"When you look at those people, those are not representative of the people of our country," he told reporters aboard Air Force One the day after.

President Donald Trump gestures as he speaks to members of the media on board Air Force One in October 2025. - Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters

But organizers remain undeterred. "Each time we show up, we disrupt President Trump's attempts to rule through repression and remind the country, and the world, that people power is our path to a truly free America," the"No Kings" websitesays.

"It is not just some abstract protest. It is a movement that has seen numbers across racial lines and economic lines," civil rights activist Rev. Al Sharpton said at Thursday's news conference. "We may not all agree on some issues, but we all agree that if we do not protect the right to vote and protect democracy, it doesn't matter where we disagree, we will all be muted and ineffective."

New flashpoints, same fight

In the months between "No Kings" rallies over the past year, the backdrop of current events has changed – from National Guard deployments to immigration enforcement crackdowns and now the war with Iran.

But many issues remain the same, organizers said.

"When I stood at the first 'No Kings' rally, we were fighting to protect democracy at home and against federal agents and troops that were deployed on American streets, against a government that was manufacturing a crisis to justify using its power against its own people. Today, we're still fighting that same fight, but now that manufactured crisis has gone global," said Naveed Shah, a US Army veteran and the political director of Common Defense.

"Our members will be turning out peacefully in the streets because they believe in a better future for this country, and they can't sit by on the sidelines about what Trump and his administration are doing to our home," said Katie Bethell, executive director of MoveOn. "Let's be clear, the Trump administration has become a threat to the American people at every level. They are waging violence at home and abroad."

Katie Bethell, executive director of MoveOn, speaks at a rally in Washington, DC, last month. - Bryan Dozier/NurPhoto/AP

"Where's the money for people struggling to afford their rent, groceries, gas, or health care?"

Americans, organizers said, are fed up with "constant chaos, and they're ready to stand in solidarity against the Trump administration's overreach."

"That's why millions of us are rising up from all walks of life, from rural communities to big cities at 'No Kings.' And as we do so, we will send the loudest, clearest message yet that this country does not belong to kings, dictators, tyrants," Bethell said.

"It belongs to us, and together we have the power to build the country we dream of."

CNN's Emily Goodwin and Kara Devlin contributed to this report.

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