Some individuals attended the No Kings march for the primary time, however others, like Shelley Facente, had attended all three. “I felt extra resolute even at present,” she informed KQED in San Francisco, evaluating this second to the earlier ones. “It was that rather more necessary that we double down and maintain displaying up.”

Among the many 1000’s of individuals collaborating within the march had been individuals of all ages. Aged contributors rode cellular scooters, and younger dad and mom hoisted their kids on their shoulders. With a home made signal in a single hand and his daughter within the different, Jesse Bell made his manner by way of the San Francisco crowd. “This was a spot, this nation, the place we had been capable of collect collectively to say how we felt, and I needed to reap the benefits of that and present my daughter the facility [of people],” he stated.
This was the third No Kings occasion in 9 months, and Kaelyn Abbott had been to all three: one in Santa Cruz, one in San José, and now San Francisco. She stated a lot had occurred because the final protest and that “we wanted to have one as soon as a month, to be sincere, with the intention to sustain with all of the grievances individuals had and to maintain momentum. Extra individuals had been lastly understanding that we actually wanted to face up for our nation.”

Many individuals within the crowd carried handmade indicators essential of current actions by the Trump administration, and lots of donned a wild array of costumes, from inflatable bald eagles to a human-size U.S. Structure with a gap for the pinnacle. Many individuals additionally carried the U.S. flag. Rachel Strom, who wore the flag like a cape in San Francisco, stated, “It was so necessary that we take again patriotism as a result of the Left had been branded as ‘hating America.’ I protested as a result of I liked America and feared the destruction of democracy.”
Final October, over seven million individuals joined occasions in all 50 states, based on nationwide organizers. Organizers for San Francisco’s “No Kings” rally estimate 100,000 individuals had been in attendance.


The rallies have drawn assist from teams throughout a variety of points, together with some who say opposing the Trump administration ought to be the highest precedence.
“We’re all in bother, however the excellent news is we will unify and we will all come collectively and say, this wants to alter,” stated Michelle Merrill, an organizer for the San José “No Kings” rally.


The scene in downtown San José was half avenue protest, half block celebration — with a Trump piñata overhead, costumed demonstrators weaving by way of the gang, musicians enjoying anti-war songs and lots of of indicators demanding an finish to the warfare in Iran, ICE enforcement and what many known as govt overreach.
A couple of thousand gathered at St. James Park by midday, many saying it was their first time at a No Kings rally. Teams like South Bay Swing Left have seen membership triple over the past 12 months consequently, stated Leesa Lovelace, a San José native and organizer with the group.
“There’s all this horrible stuff occurring on the earth, particularly in Washington, D.C.,” Lovelace stated. “However to be right here, you actually get a way that there are people who care, there are people who wish to change issues for the higher.”

A rhythmic drumming led a procession of 1000’s by way of the streets, a cultural name to resistance that 888 Taiko Collective’s Janet Koike, a third-generation Japanese American, stated was rooted in a darkish chapter of native historical past. Koike, whose dad and mom had been interned throughout World Warfare II, famous that the present political local weather appears like a repeat of the previous.
“The phrase mou shimasen means by no means once more,” Koike stated. “I’m simply grieved past perception that we’re having to lift our voices and say by no means once more.”
Rep. Sam Liccardo informed the viewers he hopped on an early morning flight after a late-night vote to face along with his constituents towards what he described as a “circus” within the White Home. Liccardo took purpose on the administration’s navy actions and financial insurance policies, particularly concentrating on the warfare in Iran.
“We bought our ladies and men in uniform preventing in a warfare that Congress by no means approved,” Liccardo stated. “You’ve got each cause to be annoyed and indignant. I’m too.”
Sen. Adam Schiff joined the refrain of “hell no” chants, warning that democracy shouldn’t be inevitable and should be “fought for and cherished by each era.” The sentiment was echoed by South Bay Rep. Ro Khanna, who emphasised the intersection of anti-war sentiment and home civil rights.
“I’m so pleased with the massive crowds that confirmed up,” Khanna informed KQED. “Over a thousand individuals are right here to face up towards the warfare in Iran… right here to face towards ICE abuse. Folks need our democracy again.”
KQED’s Lakshmi Sarah, Ayah Ali-Ahmad and Billy Cruz contributed to this report.
