Indivisible Plans Nationwide 'No Kings' March With Minneapolis Flagship
Organizers say they will hold a flagship 'No Kings' march in Minneapolis on March 28 after the Jan. 7 and Jan. 24 deaths of Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretti.

Anti-Trump 'No Kings' protest organizers target Minneapolis-St Paul for next flagship demonstration

More ‘No Kings’ protests planned for March 28 as outrage spreads over Minneapolis deaths

More 'No Kings' protests planned for March 28 as outrage spreads over Minneapolis deaths

More 'No Kings' protests planned for March 28 as outrage spreads over Minneapolis deaths
Overview
Indivisible co-executive director Ezra Levin told The Associated Press that organizers will hold a flagship 'No Kings' march in Minneapolis on March 28 and predicted as many as 9 million participants nationwide.
The announcement follows the Jan. 7 and Jan. 24 deaths of Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretti during encounters with federal agents, incidents marked by disputed official accounts, organizers said.
FBI Director Kash Patel said in an interview with podcaster Benny Johnson that he opened an investigation into Signal group chats used to track immigration agents.
Records show the Trump administration deployed roughly 3,000 federal immigration agents to Minnesota, which organizers described as the largest single enforcement operation of the president's second term.
Organizers said more than 147,000 people signed up for a Jan. 26 online training and that they will hold additional sessions, including a Feb. 5 training, and coordinate legal observers and de-escalation teams ahead of the March 28 protests.
Analysis
Center-leaning sources frame coverage as a moral backlash against perceived Trump authoritarianism, privileging organizer voices and tragic incidents. Editorial choices—calling No Kings "symbolic of resistance," foregrounding Minneapolis deaths, amplifying organizers' charged descriptions (e.g., "secret police force," "regime") and emphasizing mass training turnout—create a narrative of grassroots urgency confronting state overreach.