Trump, No Kings and protest
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The Westminster demonstration was one of 2,700 “No Kings” rallies held across the United States and internationally on Saturday.
Shreveport trash trucks blocked off a portion of Texas Street on Saturday afternoon as local protestors joined in unity for the "No Kings" protest. "The movement is really about defending the Constitution and ending the authoritarian takeover," Kimberly Ross, an organizer for the "No Kings" protest in Shreveport, said.
Rallygoers gathered in downtown Reno near the “Believe” structure to protest what they consider Trump administration overreach.
Nationwide "No Kings" protests on Oct. 18 will target President Donald Trump's immigration policies and deportation operations in major U.S. cities.
Tens of thousands of Wisconsinites participated in No Kings marches and rallies Saturday, with turnout exceeding the June No Kings rallies in Madison, Milwaukee, Green Bay and even in smaller towns including Hayward.
The “No Kings” protests brought out crowds of seven million Americans on Saturday, while Republicans maintained that President Trump is not a king. On Monday’s “Daily Show,” Jon Stewart whipped out a wig for a “surprise inspection” of the Declaration of Independence, seeing how Trump fared with the 27 specific grievances listed against the king.
The man is wearing a white T-shirt emblazoned with the slogan "FREEDOM,”—as Kirk was when he was shot—and his face, neck and T-shirt are covered with what appears to be fake blood. He is also wearing a medallion around his neck which reads ‘BOZO’—likely a reference to Bozo the Clown.
President Donald Trump faced backlash from musician Kenny Loggins over unauthorized use of 'Danger Zone' in controversial AI meme about protesters.
Jon Bon Jovi was spotted among thousands during a “ No Kings Day ” protest in Red Bank Saturday. The Sayreville native was seen holding a sign that read “No Kings. No Tyrants. No Sycophants. No Trump.” A photo of the “Livin’ on a Prayer” singer, 63, was sheared to a Bon Jovi fan page on Instagram.
The footage MSNBC aired is real and depicted Boston’s Oct. 18 “No Kings” rally. The views of the protest that MSNBC aired were similar to others that aired Oct. 18 by four Boston-area television stations. Cruz’s office did not respond by publication time to an inquiry.