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Masses gather at today’s ‘No Kings’ protests in Southern California, nationwide

More than 2,600 rallies were planned, including dozens from Los Angeles to the Inland Empire.

The Pasadena Star-News | Sat 10/18 09:27am PST | Staff And Wire Reports

Millions of people gathered across the nation – and in Southern California – on Saturday for “No Kings” demonstrations to protest the policies of President Donald Trump.

The third mass mobilization and the second No Kings Day since Trump’s return to the White House comes amid a federal government shutdown, controversial crackdowns on illegal immigration and what many decry as a turn toward American authoritarianism.

More than 2,600 rallies were planned in cities large and small, including dozens in Southern California. One protest in downtown San Bernardino that drew hundreds of people was organized by a 14-year-old boy.

National and local organizers have stressed they hoped for peaceful protests to warn about the direction of the country under Trump, though various events had a festive air, with musicians entertaining crowds and demonstrators decked out in cartoon-ish, satirical costumes. Some Republican leaders, though, dubbed the demonstrations “Hate America” rallies.

In Torrance, around 4,000 people lined the streets and parking lots near City Hall on Saturday morning. Demonstrators waved American flags and held signs reading, “No hate. No fear. Immigrants are welcomed here,” and “Respect my existence or expect my resistance.”

Katharine Nhyus with Indivisible South Bay, the group that organized the Torrance protest, encouraged those present to vote yes on Prop. 50, California’s redistricting ballot proposition, which seeks to favor Democrats in California’s congressional elections as a way to counter similar, Republican-led plans elsewhere in the country to boost the GOP.

“The way we make a difference is by doing things like this,” Nhyus told the cheering crowd.

“Since day one in January, LA has been a target of ICE with masked men taking people off the street, being kidnapped, being torn from their families,” Nhuys said. “This is not acceptable and so to me, this is still the number one issue in the South Bay – and it is one of the biggest reasons we say, ‘No Kings.’ “

“I think it’s more important than ever to stand up for the First Amendment,” said Lawndale resident Tom Tran, 42. “If we don’t use it, then there’s a real danger that we’ll lose it. It’s a scary time we’re living in and it’s more important than ever to speak up.”

Palos Verdes resident Klarysa, 47, felt passionately about attending the No Kings protest because of her experiences living in Poland as a teenager.

Klarysa left Poland 23 years ago, but said she is seeing what she saw happen there, happen in the U.S.

“The same depletion (of rights) from every part of the system,” she said. “From women’s rights to education to dismantling the institutions and going after judges.”

A protest along Ocean Boulevard in Long Beach drew around 3,000 people by noon. As with other events around the nation, some demonstrators were in costumes.

Long Beach resident Louis Mestaz wore a “Cat in the Hat” getup.

“The Cat in the Hat is a crazy kind of character,” Mestaz said, “and right now, that’s what we’re seeing in the White House. A crazy character.”

Even his sign had a Dr. Seuss vibe: “No Not for Us. We’ll not have a king. Not at all. Not at all.”

TJ Hedin, another Long Beach protester, said it was his first time attending a No Kings rally. A PhD student at UCLA, Hedin said that funding cuts and Trump’s attacks on academia are affecting his future as an educator.

“There’s been a lot of fascist behavior by the administration from all the ICE activity with no due process, cracking down on freedom of speech, actions they’ve taken against universities,” Hedin, 34, said. “I think it’s important to show up as a community and hopefully pressure our elected officials and demonstrate that we don’t all support this.”

Nearby, Kristin G., an LAUSD teacher who asked that her last name be withheld, said she has seen enrollment go down out of parents’ and students’ fears of immigration enforcement. Some students, she said, have returned to their home countries.

“We’re close to those kids,” she said. “We know them and we know their families.”

She said protests like these remind everyone that they’re not alone.

“We’re all in this together, no matter what background we come from,” she said, “You feel like we’re in this as a nation and everybody together.”

As hundreds began gathering in Huntington Beach, lawyers Susan Westover and Dale Giali showed up with large cutouts — Giali hoisting one of Trump with the words “clownish” and “traitor” hovering above the president’s shoulders, and Westover with a cutout of Pam Bondi’s head beneath a sign reading, “Lying Lawless Despot.”

Both of them said they were registered Republicans until Trump received the Republican nomination in 2016.

Westover said that the president’s “blatant hypocrisy” and “unconstitutionality” were driving factors in their appearance Saturday, as well as at the last No Kings rally in Huntington Beach in June.

“There are a lot of people who think like us,” Giali said. “Keep the faith. Let’s take our country back.”

About 300 protestors gathered outside City Hall in downtown San Bernardino on Saturday. The protest was organized by San Bernardino High student Andy Fuentes, 14.

Normally, the intersection of 3rd and D Streets is quiet on weekends, but during the No Kings protest, the streets echoed with chants, music, cowbells, the honks of motorists showing support and the cheers of protestors in response.

“I’ve been fighting for our rights ever since Donald Trump got elected again,” Fuentes said. “As a young person, I know that I am the future, so this is something I have to do.”

In Orange, several thousand people were gathered before noon at the intersection of Yorba and Chapman, near Chapman Global Medical Center. Traffic monitors were trying to manage the growing crowd.

Outside Pasadena City Hall, some 2,000 people were expected. “We are about ‘love our neighbors as ourselves,’ ” Patrick Briggs, an organizer with San Gabriel Foothills Indivisible, told the upbeat protesters.

An inflatable balloon of President Trump flew above the crowd gathered in front of Los Angeles City Hall. The orange and yellow balloon portrayed Trump with an angry expression, clad in a diaper with rainbow flags around his neck.

The crowd filled the street in front of City Hall, spilling into Gloria Molina Grand Park. Protesters held signs calling for the release of the Epstein files, and for the protection of democracy and against fascism. Protesters waved American flags, pride flags, Mexican flags and anti-Trump flags.

Massive crowds took to the streets during the first No Kings protest in June, an event that fell on Trump’s 79th birthday. The June 14 protests were mostly peaceful until protesters and local law enforcement officers clashed in downtown LA, leading to officers deploying chemical irritants and flash bang grenades at civilians.

Costumes were a fixture in downtown LA on Saturday, with demonstrators donning taco costumes, blow-up animal suits and Trump masks.

Dani Vogt, a 55-year-old attorney, was among the dozens clad in taco costumes. She decided to dress up, wearing a taco costume, hat and taco-shaped glasses to not only reference the “Trump always chickens out,” or TACO, phrase adopted by protesters in recent months regarding the president’s tariffs, but also to show a different side to the way protesters have been characterized.

“The administration has been trying to portray protestors as these scary terrorists. Even though this is a very serious issue, we are not scary, anti-American, Antifa types,” she said.

Her taco gear is meant to poke fun at “bullies,” rather than feeding into their power by calling people tyrants, Vogt said. “Mocking them as opposed to building up their power seems to hopefully deflate them a bit,” she said, standing in a group of protesters also dressed as tacos.

“Every day, it seems like there’s something worse than the day before,” Lorraine Enriquez, president of the Redlands Area Democratic Club, said ahead of the planned protest in downtown Redlands. “We’re standing up as the voice of our community.”

“We’re in the Inland Empire, an economically suppressed community,” Enriquez said. “People are not able to pay their groceries, their rent, they’re about to lose their subsidies for their health insurance. We can’t believe the rule of law has gone out the door.”

Trump was away from Washington at his Mar-a-Lago home in Florida on Saturday.

“They say they’re referring to me as a king. I’m not a king,” Trump said in a Fox News interview airing early Friday, before he departed for a $1 million-per-plate MAGA Inc. super PAC fundraiser at Mar-a-Lago. Protests were expected to occur nearby.

Republicans have sought to portray participants in Saturday’s rallies as far outside the mainstream of American politics, and a main reason for the prolonged government shutdown, now in its 18th day.

From the White House to Capitol Hill, GOP leaders disparaged the rallygoers as “communists” and “Marxists.”

They say Democratic leaders, including Schumer, are beholden to the far-left flank and willing to keep the government shut down to appease those liberal forces.

“I encourage you to watch — we call it the Hate America rally — that will happen Saturday,” said House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La.

“Let’s see who shows up for that,” Johnson said, listing groups including “antifa types,” people who “hate capitalism” and “Marxists in full display.”

In a Facebook post, former presidential contender and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders said, “It’s a love America rally.”

“It’s a rally of millions of people all over this country who believe in our Constitution, who believe in American freedom and,” he said, pointing at the GOP leadership, “are not going to let you and Donald Trump turn this country into an authoritarian society.”

Staff writers Madeline Armstrong, Christina Merino, Sierra van der Brug, Beau Yarbrough, Sydney Barragan, Jason Henry, freelancer Jarret Liotta, and the Associated Press and City News Service contributed to this report.

 

 

 

 

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