This article first appeared in Stateline.
Thousands of protests are scheduled across the United States on Saturday as part of the “No Kings” movement opposing President Donald Trump’s administration.
Organizers expect millions of people to turn out for this third round of No Kings demonstrations, with more than 3,000 local-level events mapped on the movement’s official website.
Previous No Kings protests, held in June and October of 2025, were among the largest single-day demonstrations in U.S. history, according to Harvard University’s Crowd Counting Consortium, a data project that documents political protests and other demonstrations around the country.
Driving the No Kings movement at the national level are prominent progressive organizations, including Indivisible, 50501 and MoveOn. But demonstrations are organized at the local level by coalitions of hundreds of progressive groups that run the gamut from civil rights organizations to labor unions, religious communities to nonprofits dedicated to issues such as education, climate, gun control and immigration.
“People are angrier. Our numbers are growing, and we’re really widening the tent of people that are going to stand up to a consolidation of authoritarian power,” said Hannah Stauss, one of the organizers of New York City’s No Kings protest. “Every time that (Trump) attacks, we get to reach a new section of people that are ready to stand with us.”
Top Republican leaders, after dismissing last year’s No Kings protests as “hate America” rallies backed by “radical leftists,” have remained mostly silent ahead of these latest scheduled protests.
But as the weekend promises massive crowds and spectacle across the nation, political observers and protesters alike wonder whether the demonstrations signal a coming wave of change at the polls, or whether momentum will fizzle after the crowds go home.
Democrats and other progressives are good at mobilizing people for large-scale protests, note some experts, but they’ve been less successful than conservatives in recent years at building the kind of local infrastructure needed to effect sweeping policy changes.
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