The third day of protests by the ‘No Kings’ movement began this Saturday in the United States, where more than 3,300 rallies will be held, according to organizers, which represents the largest mobilization so far against the president, Donald Trump, the war in Iran and the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Service (ICE).
The coalition of some 400 groups, such as Amnesty International, Indivisible, unions and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), plans to surpass the previous two editions of this movement. The one last October brought together 7 million attendees in 2,700 events, while the one in June 2025 brought together 5 million protesters in 2,100 sites.
Marches across the United States
The marches, in all 50 states of the country, condemn the “authoritarianism” they perceive in President Trump’s second term, particularly due to the alleged abuses of ICE and immigration operations, in which two American citizens were murdered in January in Minnesota.
They will also focus on repudiating Trump’s “illegal war” in Iran, which turns one month old this Saturday. “Americans are fed up with this constant chaos, and are ready to unite in solidarity against the Trump Administration’s excessive and egregious acts against working families and immigrants,” the coalition said in a statement before the march.
Minnesota, the main concentration
The main rally was scheduled for 2:00 p.m. Central Time (7:00 p.m. GMT) in Minnesota, where ICE and the Border Patrol killed Renee Good and Alex Pretti, two American citizens, in January, heightening national outrage against Trump’s immigration operations.
In Minneapolis, the largest city in that state, the participation of the progressive senator Bernie Sanders, the actress Jane Fonda and leaders of the largest unions in the country, such as Liz Schuler, president of the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO, in English), are expected to participate.
The demonstrations take place while disapproval of Trump reaches its highest level of his two terms in office, with 59% of Americans disapproving of his management, a Fox News poll revealed on Wednesday.

