Protesters out in force for anti-Trump ‘No Kings’ rallies across US

Update Protesters out in force for anti-Trump ‘No Kings’ rallies across US
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Anti-ICE protesters clash with federal agents at the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement building on Oct. 18, 2025 in Portland, Oregon. (Getty Images via AFP)
Update Protesters out in force for anti-Trump ‘No Kings’ rallies across US
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Protesters march during the "No Kings" rally at the Arizona State Capitol in Phoenix, Arizona, US, October 18, 2025. (Reuters)
Update Protesters out in force for anti-Trump ‘No Kings’ rallies across US
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Protesters march through downtown Austin for the "No Kings" rally on Saturday, Oct. 18, 2025. (AP)
Update Protesters out in force for anti-Trump ‘No Kings’ rallies across US
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Demonstrators wave flags during a No Kings protest, Saturday, Oct. 18, 2025, in Washington. (AP)
Update Protesters out in force for anti-Trump ‘No Kings’ rallies across US
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Federal agents forcibly detain an anti-I.C.E. protester at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement building on October 12, 2025 in Portland, Oregon. (FILE/AFP)
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Updated 19 October 2025
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Protesters out in force for anti-Trump ‘No Kings’ rallies across US

Protesters out in force for anti-Trump ‘No Kings’ rallies across US
  • With signs such as “Nothing is more patriotic than protesting” or “Resist Fascism,” in many places the events looked more like a street party

WASHINGTON: Huge crowds took to the streets in all 50 US states at “No Kings” protests on Saturday, venting anger over President Donald Trump’s hardline policies, while Republicans ridiculed them as “Hate America” rallies.

Organizers said seven million people marched in protests spanning New York to Los Angeles, with demonstrations popping up in small cities across the US heartland and even near Trump’s home in Florida.

“This is what democracy looks like!” chanted thousands in Washington near the US Capitol, where the federal government was shut down for a third week because of a legislative deadlock.

Colorful signs called on people to “protect democracy,” while others demanded the country abolish the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency at the center of Trump’s anti-immigrant crackdown.

Demonstrators slammed what they called the Republican billionaire’s strong-arm tactics, including attacks on the media, political opponents and undocumented immigrants.

“I never thought I would live to see the death of my country as a democracy,” 69-year-old retiree Colleen Hoffman said as she marched down Broadway in New York.

“We are in a crisis — the cruelty of this regime, the authoritarianism. I just feel like I cannot sit home and do nothing.”

In Los Angeles, protesters floated a giant balloon of Trump in a diaper.

Many flew flags, with at least one referencing pirate anime hit “One Piece,” brandishing the skull logo that has recently become a staple of anti-government protests from Peru to Madagascar.

“Fight Ignorance not migrants,” read one sign at a protest in Houston, where nearly one-quarter of the population is made up of immigrants, according to the Migration Policy Institute.

While animated, the protests were largely peaceful.

But in downtown Los Angeles, police fired nonlethal rounds and tear gas late Saturday to disperse crowds that included “No Kings” protesters, the Los Angeles Times reported.

“After thousands of people gathered to express their constitutional 1st Amendment rights peacefully earlier in the day, nearly a hundred agitators marched over to Aliso and Alameda” where they used lasers and industrial-size flashing lights, the LAPD Central Division said on X.

“A Dispersal Order was issued and the demonstrators were dispersed from the area,” it added, without specifying if any arrests were made.

Trump responds

It was not possible to independently verify the organizers’ attendance figures. In New York, authorities said more than 100,000 gathered at one of the largest protests, while in Washington, crowds were estimated at between 8,000 and 10,000 people.

Trump’s response to Saturday’s events was typically aggressive, with the US president posting a series of AI-generated videos to his Truth Social platform depicting him as a king.

In one, he is shown wearing a crown and piloting a fighter jet that drops what appears to be feces on anti-Trump protesters.

His surrogates were in fighting form, too, with House Speaker Mike Johnson deriding the rallies as being “Hate America” protests.

“You’re going to bring together the Marxists, the Socialists, the Antifa advocates, the anarchists and the pro-Hamas wing of the far-left Democrat Party,” he told reporters.

Protesters treated that claim with ridicule.

“Look around! If this is hate, then someone should go back to grade school,” said Paolo, 63, as the crowd chanted and sang around him in Washington.

Others underlined the deep polarization tearing apart American politics.

“Here’s the thing about what right-wingers say: I don’t give a crap. They hate us,” said Tony, a 34-year-old software engineer.

‘Country of equals’

Deirdre Schifeling of the American Civil Liberties Union said protesters wanted to convey that “we are a country of equals.”

“We are a country of laws that apply to everyone, of due process and of democracy. We will not be silenced,” she told reporters.

Leah Greenberg, co-founder of the Indivisible Project, slammed the Trump administration’s efforts to send National Guard troops into Democratic-led US cities, including Los Angeles, Washington, Chicago, Portland and Memphis.

“It is the classic authoritarian playbook: threaten, smear and lie, scare people into submission,” Greenberg said.

Addressing the crowd outside the US Capitol, progressive Senator Bernie Sanders warned of the dangers democracy faced under Trump.

“We have a president who wants more and more power in his own hands and in the hands of his fellow oligarchs,” he said.

Isaac Harder, 16, said he feared for his generation’s future.

“It’s a fascist trajectory. And I want to do anything I can to stop that.”


At UN climate talks in Brazil, the only sign of the United States is an empty chair

At UN climate talks in Brazil, the only sign of the United States is an empty chair
Updated 11 November 2025
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At UN climate talks in Brazil, the only sign of the United States is an empty chair

At UN climate talks in Brazil, the only sign of the United States is an empty chair
  • Brazil President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, whose nation is hosting these talks, urged negotiators not to forget that “the climate emergency is an increase of inequality”

BELEM, Brazil: A litany of recent weather disasters rang long Monday at the opening of UN climate negotiations: Hurricane Melissa in Jamaica, a deadly tornado in Brazil, droughts and fire in Africa. Against that backdrop, activists used an empty chair to drive home the absence from these talks of the United States, the world’s richest nation and second-biggest carbon polluter.
World leaders highlighted the devastation wrought on some of the world’s poorest places to show the need to work collectively to fight global warming, which is fueling extreme weather. But any united front will be without the US, one of only four nations missing the talks, along with tiny San Marino and strife-torn Afghanistan and Myanmar.
The 195 nations who did come to Belem, a weathered city on the edge of the Brazilian Amazon, for the talks known as COP30 were told that only together can they swiftly reduce the emissions from coal, oil and gas that cause climate change.
While the activists’ empty chair primarily illustrated the US absence, it was also intended to be a call-out for other nations “to step in and step up,” Danni Taaffe with Climate Action Network International told The Associated Press.
Those leading the talks sounded a similar note.
“Humanity is still in this fight. We have some tough opponents, no doubt, but we also have some heavyweights on our side. One is the brute power of the market forces as renewables get cheaper,” United Nations climate secretary Simon Stiell said.
A clear mandate
Brazil President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, whose nation is hosting these talks, urged negotiators not to forget that “the climate emergency is an increase of inequality.”
“It deepens the perverse logic that defines who is worthy of living and who should die,” Lula said.
This year’s talks are not expected to produce an ambitious new deal. Instead, organizers and analysts frame this year’s conference as the “implementation COP.” Countries had a clear mandate: arrive with their updated national plans to fight climate change.
On Monday, the United Nations released updated calculations showing that those national pledges promise to reduce projected 2035 global greenhouse gas emissions 12 percent below 2019 levels. That’s 2 points better than last month, before new pledges rolled in.
Attendees on Monday stressed cooperation, with Stiell saying that individual nations simply cannot cut heat-trapping gas emissions fast enough on their own.
André Corrêa do Lago, president of this year’s conference, emphasized that negotiators must engage in “mutirão” — a local Indigenous term that refers to a group uniting to complete a task.
A united front — without the US
Complicating those calls is the absence of the United States, where US President Donald Trump has long denied the existence of climate change.
The UN’s updated figures Monday depend on a US pledge that came from the Biden administration in December — before Trump returned to the White House and began working to boost fossil fuels and block clean energy like wind and solar. His administration did not send high-level negotiators to Belem, and he began his second term by withdrawing for the second time from the 10-year-old Paris Agreement, the first global pact to fight climate change.
The Paris Agreement sought to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above the historical average, but many scientists now say it’s unlikely countries will stay below that threshold.
The United States has put more heat-trapping carbon dioxide into the air from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas than any other country. China is the No. 1 carbon polluter now, but because carbon dioxide stays in the air for at least a century, more of it was made in the US.
Palau Ambassador Ilana Seid, who chairs the Alliance of Small Island States, said the US withdrawal “has really shifted the gravity” of the negotiating system.
Trump’s actions damage the fight against climate change, former US Special Envoy for Climate Todd Stern said.
“It’s a good thing that they are not sending anyone. It wasn’t going to be constructive if they did,” he said.
Though the US government isn’t showing up, some attendees including former top US negotiators are pointing to US cities, states and businesses that they said will help take up the slack.
‘A tragedy of the present’
Lula and Stiell said the 10-year-old Paris Agreement is working to a degree, but action needs to be accelerated. They pointed to devastation in the past few weeks including Hurricane Melissa in the Caribbean, typhoons smashing Vietnam and the Philippines and a tornado ripping through southern Brazil.
Scientists have said extreme weather events have become more frequent as Earth warms.
“Climate change is not a threat of the future. It is already a tragedy of the present time,’’ Lula said.