Trump news at a glance: No Kings rallies draw millions to US streets in protest against president
Democracy has no kings’ reads a poster at a No Kings rally in Cambridge, Massachusetts on 28 March, 2026 Photograph: Rob Schoenbaum/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock
In the third such demonstration against the Trump administration, massive anti-authoritarian No Kings protests were held on Saturday in 16 nations and 50 states.
People participated in large-scale protests against federal immigration enforcement, growing living expenses, and Donald Trump's determination to go to war with Iran.
After 7 million people countrywide attended the previous No Kings rally in October, organizers predicted that Saturday's demonstration will be the biggest to yet.
Here is a quick summary of the main stories:
Millions of Americans attend the Third No Kings demonstration to protest the Trump administration.
A combination of organizers, including trade unions, other grassroots organizations, and the "anti-authoritarian" groups Indivisible and 50501, reported that more than 3,000 No Kings demonstrations against the Trump administration took place across the US and in more than a dozen nations on Saturday.
Prior to the demonstrations, Ezra Levin, co-founder of Indivisible, stated, "I would expect March 28 to be the biggesJust vaccines, no monarchs!Protesters assemble at the NIH headquarters to voice their opposition to funding reductions for medical research.
About a thousand people gathered outside the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland, on Saturday morning to protest the Trump administration's health policies and cuts to medical research, while tens of thousands of people gathered across the United States and around the world for the No Kings protests.
t protest in American history."
After Republicans reject a Senate accord, the US House adopts a temporary DHS funding bill.
Late on Friday, US House Republicans passed their own financing plan in place of a bipartisan Senate agreement to temporarily fund the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), prolonging a weeks-long budget impasse that has hampered air traffic.
After Republicans in the lower house declined to consider a Senate-approved agreement that excluded financing for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the border patrol, the stopgap bill, which would finance the DHS in full for eight weeks, passed by a vote of 213 to 203.
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Front Pages ofPeople joined massive rallies across 50 states to protest Trump’s decision to enter war in Iran, immigration policies and rising living costs. Key US politics stories from Saturday 28 March at a glance Major U.S. Newspapers (29 March 2026)
The New York Times
Main headlines highlights:
- Growing tension in the U.S.–Iran conflict and possible escalation of military operations.
- Political debate in Washington over foreign policy and economic pressures.
- Coverage of global security developments and international diplomacy.
The Washington Post
Key front-page stories:
- Legal battle over birthright citizenship and immigration policy moving toward the Supreme Court.
- Reports about North Korea testing a missile engine capable of targeting the U.S. mainland.
- Updates on the Middle East conflict and U.S. troop deployments.
USA Today
Top front-page coverage:
- U.S. military buildup and international conflict news.
- Economic concerns including rising oil prices and markets.
- Major national stories, sports highlights, and lifestyle features.
✅ Summary:
Today’s major U.S. newspapers focus mainly on international conflict (Iran war), U.S. politics and immigration debates, and global security developments. These topics dominate the front pages of The New York Times, The Washington Post, and USA Today.
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