Heightened sense of urgency around this โ€˜No Kings Dayโ€™

Heightened sense of urgency around this โ€˜No Kings Dayโ€™



When millions of demonstrators took to the streets in June for โ€œNo Kings Dayโ€ โ€” depicting President Trump as a wannabe monarch intent on violating American democratic norms โ€” it was still fairly early in his administration.

The immigration raids in Los Angeles were just getting under way and Trump had deployed military troops to the city to clamp down on protests.

But four months later, many Americans feel Trumpโ€™s threats and norm-shattering actions have only gotten more intense as protesters prepare to take part Saturday in more than 2,700 โ€œNo Kingsโ€ demonstrations scheduled across the country.

In that period, the Trump administration has ramped up immigration raids across L.A. and Chicago and deployed National Guard troops to Washington D.C. It has also pressured universities to comply with his agenda or lose funding, fired government officials he deems insufficiently loyal and embarked on an aggressive sweep of prosecutions of political opponents.

โ€œWeโ€™re seeing an escalation, right?,โ€ said Hunter Dunn, a spokesman for 50501, one of the โ€œNo Kingsโ€ coalitionโ€™s core organizing partners. โ€œWe are watching as ICEโ€™s mass deportation program is speeding up and becoming even more aggressive than it was. What happened in Los Angeles is now happening in Memphis, in D.C., in Chicago.โ€

But the second โ€œNo Kingsโ€ protest comes with some existential questions for organizers who trying to mount a sustained protest movement. What is the most effective way to challenge Trump? And how do you make noise without playing into the presidentโ€™s hands?

Saturdayโ€™s revival of the massive series of demonstrations โ€” organized around the slogan โ€œNo Thrones. No Crowns. No Kingsโ€ โ€” will voice left-wing concerns that the Trump administration is embracing authoritarian tactics and unraveling U.S. democracy. But it will also include a broader range of issues, including rising prices and rollbacks of environmental protections.

For Dunn, a 22-year-old organizer in Los Angeles County who is part of a coalition of thousands of groups, the threat Trump poses goes beyond immigration. Trump, he noted, had used the Federal Communications Commission to try to silence broadcasters he does not like, brought โ€œspuriousโ€ charges against protesters and demonstrators outside of ICE facilities and signed a so-called โ€œbig, beautiful billโ€ that Dunn said had funneled trillions of dollars from the average American to billionaires who supported the Trump regime.

โ€œWeโ€™re seeing the Trump administration repeatedly try and fail to shake the pillars of democracy, and in doing so, escalate the threat level,โ€ Dunn said.

The June 14 event inspired more than five million people to rally against Trump. One test will be whether they can increase that number on Saturday.

In both Los Angeles and Chicago, Trump has tried to use protests โ€” many of them peaceful โ€” to claim that the streets are unsafe and in need of military troops. Trump pushed back against the underlying premise of the protest in an interview with Fox News Friday.

โ€œTheyโ€™re referring to me as a king,โ€ he said. โ€œIโ€™m not a king.โ€

Protesters also face increasing attacks from Trumpโ€™s allies on the right, some of whom are branding their demonstrations as anti-American.

โ€œWe call it the โ€˜hate Americaโ€™ rally,โ€ U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson said Wednesday at a news conference. โ€œLetโ€™s see who shows up for that. I bet you youโ€™ll see Hamas supporters, I bet youโ€™ll see Antifa types, I bet youโ€™ll see the Marxists on full display, the people who donโ€™t want to stand and defend the foundational truths of this republic.โ€

Organizers expect a broad and diverse group of Americans to attend Saturdayโ€™s โ€œNo Kingsโ€ demonstrations. About 600 more events are scheduled than the 2,100 demonstrations that took place in June, and slightly more people have signed up, even though the organization is discouraging registrations.

David S. Meyer, a professor of sociology at UC Irvine who studies social movements, said that peopleโ€™s opinions about the Trump administration have not changed too much since June. Rather, he argued, people felt a higher level of urgency about the danger of the Trump administration.

โ€œWhatโ€™s increased is the willingness of people to take more action, to do something,โ€ he said. โ€œI think thereโ€™s a hunger for action.โ€

Meyer said he was surprised to see key GOP leaders falling into line with Trump and pushing the idea that โ€œNo Kingsโ€ is anti-American.

โ€œThere are plenty of presidents whoโ€™ve encountered protests against their policies,โ€ Meyer said. โ€œThatโ€™s part of what America is all about. And usually presidents say, โ€˜I have to represent everybody and do what I think is best for the country. And I understand that there are other Americans who disagree with me.โ€™โ€

In an attempt to broaden the scope of โ€œNo Kings,โ€ Meyer noted, organizers are appealing to Americans upset over the rising cost of living, gutting of environmental protections, sweeping overhauls of federal agencies and the government shutdown over looming healthcare cuts. These issues, Meyer argued, are connected to the theme of American democracy.

โ€œTrump doesnโ€™t consult with people who disagree with him โ€ฆ and the people surrounding him, and this is by design, are explicitly chosen because of their loyalty rather than their specific competencies,โ€ Meyer said. โ€œThe strategy of the โ€˜No Kingsโ€™ organizers is to provide a kind of large and inclusive bucket for all the grievances to fit into and for people with all kinds of different gripes to show up.โ€

Another reason โ€œNo Kingsโ€ touches on so many issues, Dunn said, is in response to the Republican tactic โ€” articulated by Trumpโ€™s former White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon as โ€œflooding the zoneโ€ โ€” of overwhelming the public with a barrage of information, disinformation and controversy.

โ€œRepublicansโ€™ strategy is to worsen the economy for everyone, to worsen the cost of living for the average American… to try to weaken the American people and make it harder for them to stand up against this administrationโ€™s abuses,โ€ Dunn said. โ€œSo thatโ€™s why weโ€™re standing up on all those fronts, because we have to meet them at every front that theyโ€™re using to harm the American people.โ€

The goal of โ€œNo Kingsโ€ goes beyond just getting Americans out on the streets together in solidarity against Trump. They want to connect people who are upset and frustrated with the Trump administration to local organizing groups.

โ€œGetting involved in those groups, making those face to face connections and joining them will have a much larger impact over the next few days, the next few weeks, next few months, the next few years, than just one day of protest,โ€ Dunn said.

Going forward, Dunn said, one of the key questions facing the Trump resistance movement is how to pressure leading Democratic elected officials to get on board.

While legislators such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Bernie Sanders and Chris Van Hollen had done a lot to resist the Trump administration, he said, he wanted to put more pressure on mainstream Democrats across the country.

โ€œHow do we get support from what is supposed to be the opposition party?โ€

Dunn said he was not worried about the prospect of violence Saturday when millions take to the streets. The rallies and demonstrations that took place on the June demonstrations were overwhelmingly peaceful, he noted. Organizers put a major emphasis on de-escalation and protest safety, bringing in community and faith leaders and training tens of thousands of volunteers across the country in de-escalation. He scoffed at the idea extremists might hijack any of the demonstrations.

โ€œThe biggest threat to safety at every protest Iโ€™ve ever been at โ€” unless law enforcement gets involved โ€” is always dehydration and heat exhaustion,โ€ Dunn said.

Olivia Negron, 73, an organizer with Studio City Rising who has protested in that L.A. neighborhood every weekend since April, said she was alarmed not just by the presidentโ€™s rhetoric, but by the Trump administrationโ€™s actions against immigrants through the courts and in the streets.

โ€œThe president doesnโ€™t know what it is to be American,โ€ said Negron, a Latina and the child of a U.S. Navy officer. โ€œThe American dream is about inclusivity and making sure that immigrants are welcomed into the United States.โ€

Negron, who marched against the war in Vietnam, said she felt the people in power have taken away what it means to be American and made it difficult to fly the American flag. But she said she was hopeful that the Trump administrationโ€™s actions since the last โ€œNo Kingsโ€ day would push more people to protest.

โ€œWe need to turn the ship of state around and get this democracy heading in the right direction,โ€ Negron said. โ€œAbsolutely more inclusion, more equity, more diversity. Diversity is our strength and empathy is our superpower.โ€

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