“The American people were lied to about the war in Vietnam. We were lied to about the war in Iraq, and we are being lied to today about the war in Iran.” — Senator Bernie Sanders, St. Paul, March 28, 2026
On Saturday, March 28, 2026, more than 3,000 demonstrations took place across the United States under the banner of “No Kings” — the third major round of nationwide protests against President Donald Trump’s second-term administration. From New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago to rural Idaho, Wyoming, and a remote community above the Arctic Circle in Alaska, Americans turned out in numbers that organisers described as the largest mobilisation of the No Kings movement yet.
The protests were not organised by the Democratic Party. They were coordinated primarily by Indivisible — a grassroots civic organisation — along with hundreds of local groups, labour unions, and community organisations. Three overlapping grievances drove the crowds: the Iran war, ICE immigration enforcement, and the rising cost of living.
📜 What “No Kings” Means: The Constitutional Argument
The name is deliberately chosen. It invokes the foundational American principle — the rejection of monarchy and hereditary power — that animated the 1776 Declaration of Independence and the Constitution’s explicit prohibition on titles of nobility. The First Amendment to the US Constitution guarantees the right of citizens to “peaceably assemble” and to “petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” The No Kings movement frames its protests explicitly as an exercise of these constitutional rights.
The phrase functions as a direct political statement: protesters argue that Trump’s exercise of executive power — through immigration enforcement operations, conducting the Iran war without Congressional authorisation, and what they describe as attacks on judicial independence — represents an authoritarian overreach inconsistent with republican government.
This is not a legally precise argument (the courts remain active and the constitutional system has not formally collapsed), but it is a powerful political one that resonates with a significant portion of the American population.
The name “No Kings” is a reference to why America broke from Britain in 1776 — to escape a king who ruled without accountability. Protesters are essentially saying: the President is acting like a king. The First Amendment is their legal protection to say this publicly and collectively.
🌍 Three Rounds: The Full Context
The March 28 protests were the third major round of No Kings demonstrations — not the first:
- Round 1 (2025): Organised in the early months of Trump’s second term in response to executive orders targeting immigration, federal workforce reductions, and the politicisation of the justice system. Drew millions nationwide.
- Round 2 (October 2025): A second major day of action with continued widespread geographic participation. Between rounds, Trump’s nationwide ICE enforcement blitz — including Minneapolis, Chicago, and Los Angeles — generated intense controversy.
- January 2026: ICE agents fatally shot Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis. The killings transformed immigration enforcement from a policy debate into a visceral question about the use of lethal force against civilians.
- Round 3 (March 28, 2026): Context had escalated sharply. The Iran war — launched February 28 — drove US gasoline above $4/gallon nationally (California exceeded $5). Brent crude above $115 meant real economic pain. Trump’s approval ratings slipped as the war’s costs became tangible.
“No Kings” is the THIRD round — not the first. Previous rounds took place in 2025. The protests were also organised by Indivisible (a civil society group) — NOT officially by the Democratic Party. These two distinctions are commonly confused in MCQ-style questions.
👤 The Marquee Event: St. Paul, Minnesota
The headline rally was in St. Paul, Minnesota — chosen for its symbolic weight as the city most directly affected by the January ICE killings. The event drew tens of thousands to the State Capitol grounds.
- Bruce Springsteen performed “Streets of Minneapolis” — a protest song he wrote and released in January 2026, immediately after the ICE killings. The crowd chanted “ICE out now” alongside Springsteen, who called Minnesota “an inspiration to the entire country.”
- Senator Bernie Sanders (Vermont) warned of “an unprecedented and dangerous moment in American history,” named Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, and Larry Ellison as examples of oligarchic wealth concentration, and called the Iran war unconstitutional.
- Minnesota Governor Tim Walz — the 2024 Democratic vice-presidential candidate — offered fierce criticism of Trump’s immigration policies.
- Representative Ilhan Omar (Minnesota’s 5th district) declared “we are Minnesota strong.”
- Actress Jane Fonda appeared but did not speak; instead she read a statement from Becca Good, wife of Renee Good (killed by ICE in January), calling for “radical kindness” and an end to “divisive rhetoric, escalating tensions, fear mongering.”
Bruce Springsteen wrote “Streets of Minneapolis” in January 2026 — within days of the ICE killings. The speed from tragedy to protest anthem to marquee stage performance at a national rally demonstrates how music functions as a mobilisation tool in American civil movements. Compare the role of song in historical movements: “We Shall Overcome” (civil rights), “Give Peace a Chance” (Vietnam era). Does protest music shape movements or merely reflect them?
📌 Geographic Reach: Far Beyond Blue States
What made the March 28 round distinctively significant: nearly half the 3,000+ protests took place in Republican-leaning areas — not just coastal blue cities. This included:
- Texas: Over 100 events — Dallas, Arlington, Fort Worth, Houston, and dozens of smaller cities
- Florida: Boynton Beach, West Palm Beach, Jacksonville, Miami
- Georgia: Including the coast at Jekyll Island
- Idaho, Wyoming, Utah: Among the most reliably Republican states — each had events in double digits
- Kotzebue, Alaska: A remote community above the Arctic Circle — one of the most geographically distant protests
- Driggs, Idaho: A community of fewer than 2,000 people where protesters waved signs at roadside traffic
This geographic pattern matters because it undermines the political framing that opposition to Trump is concentrated in coastal urban liberal enclaves. Chicago veteran Chris Holy, who told CNN he had never protested before, captured the emerging mood: “I see the injustices going on, in my opinion, what’s happening to the people in our nation, and I wanted to be here to voice my dissatisfaction.”
| Location Type | Examples | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Blue metros (expected) | New York, LA, Chicago, Boston | Large numbers, media attention |
| Red state cities (notable) | Dallas, Houston, Atlanta, Jacksonville | Breaks coastal-only narrative |
| Deep-red rural areas | Driggs ID, rural WY, rural UT | Unprecedented for No Kings movement |
| Remote communities | Kotzebue, Alaska (Arctic Circle) | Most geographically distant event |
⚖️ The Three Core Grievances
1. The Iran War: The conflict — launched February 28 without a formal Congressional declaration of war — has become a defining flashpoint. Senator Sanders described it as unconstitutional, invoking the War Powers Resolution of 1973, which requires the President to notify Congress within 48 hours of committing forces and limits unauthorised military action to 60 days. Rising gasoline prices ($4+ nationally, $5+ in California) directly connect the war to household budgets.
2. ICE Enforcement: The killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis in January 2026 transformed what had been an abstract immigration debate into a question about the use of lethal force against civilians. Anti-ICE signs dominated marches in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Portland.
3. Cost of Living: Gasoline prices, rising food costs, and the threat of recession as the Iran war drags on are the most immediate economic grievances — and the issues most likely to shape the November 2026 midterm elections.
War Powers Resolution (1973): A Congressional statute (NOT part of the Constitution) requiring the President to notify Congress within 48 hours of committing armed forces and limiting unauthorised action to 60 days. Sanders used this to call the Iran war unconstitutional. Key exam trap: it is a statute, not a constitutional amendment.
🌍 The India Angle: Why This Matters for GD/PI & UPSC Essays
The No Kings protests are not directly about India — but they carry significant relevance for competitive exam candidates:
- US Democratic Health as Global Question: India and the US are described as the world’s largest democracies. Large-scale protests about executive overreach raise questions about institutional resilience — a recurring GD/PI theme.
- Iran War Domestic Politics: Understanding American domestic opposition to the war provides context for why a negotiated settlement may eventually emerge. It also shows how wars affect civilian approval — directly relevant to India’s energy security analysis.
- First Amendment vs. Article 19: The US First Amendment (free speech, assembly, petition) contrasts interestingly with India’s Article 19(1)(b) — right to assemble peacefully — and its reasonable restrictions under Article 19(3). GD panels regularly explore these comparative constitutional frameworks.
- War Powers Resolution vs. Indian Parliament: The constitutional debate over whether a president can conduct war without legislative authorisation parallels debates in other democracies — including India’s parliamentary approval for military deployments.
Compare: US First Amendment (Congress shall make no law abridging freedom of assembly) vs. Indian Article 19(1)(b) + 19(3). The US right is near-absolute; India’s includes “reasonable restrictions” that the state can impose. Which model better balances democratic expression with public order? This comparison makes for a strong essay or GD answer on civil liberties in democracies.
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March 28, 2026 was the THIRD round of No Kings protests. The first two rounds both took place in 2025, in the early and middle months of Trump’s second term. Calling it the first or second round is a common exam error.
The protests were organised primarily by Indivisible — a grassroots civic organisation co-founded by Ezra Levin, created in the early days of Trump’s first term. They were NOT officially run by the Democratic Party. This distinction (civic vs. partisan organisation) is a known exam trap.
The marquee rally was at the State Capitol in St. Paul, Minnesota — chosen for its symbolic connection to the January 2026 ICE killings in Minneapolis. Bruce Springsteen performed “Streets of Minneapolis,” Senator Bernie Sanders, Governor Tim Walz, Rep. Ilhan Omar, and actress Jane Fonda all appeared.
The War Powers Resolution (1973) is a Congressional STATUTE — not a constitutional amendment. Passed during the Nixon era after Vietnam, it requires the President to notify Congress within 48 hours of committing forces and limits unauthorised military action to 60 days. Sanders invoked it to call the Iran war unconstitutional.
Article 19(1)(b) of the Indian Constitution guarantees the right to assemble peacefully and without arms. Article 19(3) allows the state to impose reasonable restrictions in the interests of sovereignty, public order, or morality — unlike the near-absolute US First Amendment.