No Kings Was Biggest Protest In U S History Data Analyst
The “No Kings” protests in every state may have been the biggest day of demonstrations in American history, a data analyst has suggested. “Based on hundreds of crowd-sourced records of No Kings Day event turnout, and extrapolating for the cities where we don’t have data yet, it looks like roughly 4-6m people protested Trump across the U.S. yesterday,” independent data journalist G Elliott posted to X Sunday. For reference, that’d mean Saturday’s demonstrations featured 1-2 percent of the total population of 340 million taking to the streets in more than 2,000 cities to voice their opposition to the increasingly authoritarian, far-right... Based on hundreds of crowd-sourced records of No Kings Day event turnout, and extrapolating for the cities where we don't have data yet, it looks like roughly 4-6m people protested Trump across the U.S. yesterday.
Mobilized anti-Trump resistance is exceeding 2017 levels. 🧵 pic.twitter.com/DOEjJ9DA30 The “No Kings” rallies follow after a spate of demonstrations against immigration raids carried out in Los Angeles and the surrounding area last week, to which Trump deployed 4,000 members of the National Guard... This resonnated so very deeply with me: Part of the aim of protests is also about the emotional resonance of being joyful in a like-minded group. “Nothing makes the oppressors more furious than seeing the oppressed having a good time,” said a trombonist who played amidst the protests. An ACTION PLAN is Prepared Based on this Article’s Research:
The evidence of large protests increasing is perfect for leading to the creation of a WORLD-WIDE UNITY CAMPAIGN based on a commonality so that the people in every country participate. By working together for a commonality, we can resolve our differences. Research has shown that the basic common denominators to unite are the “welfare of the children” and “no violence.” The people in every country want their children to grow up in a safe and... Therefore, a new global peace movement is planned as an “EMERGENCY PLAN “to unite the people” of the world – A Global Movement of Nonviolence, For the Children (GMofNV). A GMofNV is designed to unite the peace and climate movements, other movements (ex: labor, youth, and indigenous, BLM, PPC), unite all the religions and spiritual organizations, and unite the mayors and community leaders... Published: Thursday, June 19, 2025 at 11:00 am
No Kings Protests: A Record-Breaking Demonstration? Recent estimates suggest the "No Kings" protests held last weekend may have been one of the largest single-day demonstrations in United States history. Data journalist G. Elliott Morris, using data from various locations, calculated a turnout between 4 and 6 million people, representing 1.2% to 1.8% of the US population. This figure could potentially surpass the 2017 Women's March, which drew between 3.3 and 5.6 million participants. Morris's methodology involved gathering attendance data from local newspapers and, where unavailable, relying on estimates from organizers and attendees.
He then used the median attendance from locations with data to approximate the numbers for unreported protests, aiming to control for the impact of large city events. While the tally remains unofficial, it aligns with an estimate of 5 million people provided by Ezra Levin, co-founder of Indivisible, the organization behind the event. However, not all experts agree on the final ranking. Jeremy Pressman of the Crowd Counting Consortium stated that an official count would take time. Meanwhile, Donald Trump's director of communications dismissed the protests as a failure. The scale of the "No Kings" protests has sparked comparisons to other significant historical events, including the 1963 March on Washington and the 1970 Earth Day protests.
The 1963 March on Washington had up to half a million people in attendance. The Earth Day protests had 20 million people in attendance, which was about 10% of the US population. Other large-scale events include the 1986 Hands Across America fundraiser, which drew an estimated 5 million participants, and the 2020 protests against the murder of George Floyd, which saw between 15 and 26 million... The 3.5% rule, a concept discussed in the wake of the protests, suggests that nonviolent movements with the support of at least 3.5% of a population have historically succeeded in triggering change. While the "No Kings" protests may not have reached this threshold, they have invigorated organizers, who are planning further demonstrations. BNN's Perspective: The "No Kings" protests, regardless of their final ranking, highlight the power of public assembly and the importance of civic engagement.
While the sheer number of participants is impressive, sustained change requires more than just a single day of protest. It necessitates ongoing grassroots organizing and a commitment to democratic principles. Keywords: No Kings, protests, demonstration, turnout, Women's March, G. Elliott Morris, Ezra Levin, Indivisible, crowd size, March on Washington, Earth Day, George Floyd, 3.5% rule, nonviolent movements, civic engagement. Join us in reporting Russian hateand propaganda on global social networks. Official data analysis has confirmed what many felt on the streets, showing the "No Kings" protest was the single largest day of demonstrations in the history of the United States.
According to professional data analyst G. Elliott Morris, the numbers are staggering. Based on hundreds of crowd-sourced records and extrapolation for cities without official data, an estimated 4 to 6 million people participated. This represents between 1 and 2 percent of the entire population of the United States taking to the streets on the same day to voice their opposition. This historic turnout is part of a larger trend. Data shows a significant increase in political demonstrations.
A chart comparing the cumulative number of protests during Trump's first term in 2017 with his second in 2025 reveals a dramatic surge, with the number of events skyrocketing from just over 5,000 to... This can be seen as a "rubber band effect" where the more the administration pulls towards authoritarianism, the stronger the people pull back in the name of democracy. The energy behind this massive protest movement is undeniable and growing. But this movement is not just about numbers; it's about people. At one of the protests, a man holding a simple, handwritten sign that read "Leave My Neighbors Alone!!!" perfectly captured the spirit of the day. He spoke about the cruelty of the administration's policies, stating, "It's ridiculous to be actually taking people who are here with legal status and taking it away from them." He shared stories of his...
Now, despite their hardship and attempts to follow the legal process, they live in fear of deportation. This is the human cost that fuels the resistance. The frustration is compounded by a deep-seated hypocrisy. Many Trump supporters claim they only want to deport those who commit crimes. However, the administration's actions tell a different story. They are targeting people with Temporary Protected Status (TPS), students, and even individuals who are just weeks away from their scheduled court dates.
These are not criminals; they are hardworking people trying to build a life. As the protestor noted, polling shows that even a majority of Republican primary voters support a path to citizenship for Dreamers, yet the administration continues its hardline approach, demonizing entire communities. The scale of last weekend’s “No Kings” protests is now becoming clearer, with one estimate suggesting that Saturday was among the biggest ever single-day protests in US history. Working out exactly where the protest ranks compared with similar recent events has been a project of G Elliott Morris, a data journalist who runs the Substack Strength in Numbers, calculated turnout between 4... This could exceed the previous record in recent history, when between 3.3 million and 5.6 million people showed up at the 2017 Women’s March to rally against Trump’s misogynistic rhetoric. Morris estimated the No Kings Day protest turnout in two steps.
First, his team gathered data at events for as many locations as possible, defaulting to tallies published in local newspapers. Where that wasn’t available, they relied on estimates from organizers and attenders themselves. To come up with a rough approximation of nationwide numbers, he then estimated the attendance in each unreported protest would be equal to the median of the attendance in places where data did exist. “That’s a tough approximation, but at least an empirical one,” Morris wrote in an email. “We use the median instead of the average to control for outliers, [such as the fact that] big cities pull the average up, but most events are not huge urban protests.” Morris stressed that the Strength in Numbers tally remains unofficial, and he hopes that researchers will “build” on his data when they conduct more studies.
But his estimation is similar to that made by Ezra Levin, the co-founder of Indivisible, the progressive non-profit that organized the event. He estimated that 5 million people across the globe took to the streets. The historic number of No Kings Day protesters and their expansive geographic spread are signs of a growing and durable pro-democracy movement. ( Waging Nonviolence ) – No Kings Day on June 14 was one of the largest single days of protest in United States history, and it was probably the second-largest single day demonstration since... The number of participants and expansive geographic spread that day are both signs of the persistent popular opposition to the second Trump administration. The Crowd Counting Consortium has been collecting data on protest events and participation since the first Women’s March on Jan.
21, 2017. Last week, we published our most recent monthly update, with estimated figures for the month of June, including the nationwide No Kings protests on June 14. With 82 percent of anti-Trump events for which we tallied participation on June 14, our estimates suggest that between 2 and 4.8 million people participated in over 2,150 actions nationwide. (We could not confirm estimated protest figures at 18 percent of events; almost all of these missing figures were in small towns.) However, we estimate the turnout at No Kings to be substantially larger... The Women’s March in 2017 — which involved between 3.2 and 5.3 million people — was, at the time, probably the largest single-day demonstration in U.S. history.
No Kings in June 2025 had comparable aggregate turnout, albeit across far more locations. Whereas the 2017 Women’s March involved actions in over 650 locations, No Kings saw events in over three times as many locations, with events organized in big cities, small towns and places in between. In that regard, No Kings was geographically more similar to some of the dispersed protests that began to dominate the U.S. protest landscape in 2018. For instance, on March 14, 2018, between 1.1 and 1.7 million students walked out of their classrooms on the one-month anniversary of the school shooting in Parkland, Florida. In an unprecedented demonstration, students in about 4,470 locations — from kindergartners to university students and even some homeschooled students — participated in what was then the largest number of recorded locations in a...
history. Ten days later, on March 24, 2018, the March for Our Lives drew an estimated 1.3 to 2.2 million participants in over 700 locations to demand safety from gun violence in schools. (The 2018 Women’s March, about two months earlier, had drawn an estimated 1.8 to 2.6 million people in 407 locations.) Protests throughout the month of June 2018 turned out several million protesters, largely accounted... The “No Kings” protests in every state may have been the biggest day of demonstrations in American history, a data analyst has suggested. “Based on hundreds of crowd-sourced records of No Kings Day event turnout, and extrapolating for the cities where we don’t have data yet, it looks like roughly 4-6m people protested Trump across the U.S. yesterday,” independent data journalist G Elliott posted to X Sunday.
For reference, that’d mean Saturday’s demonstrations featured 1-2 percent of the total population of 340 million taking to the streets in more than 2,000 cities to voice their opposition to the increasingly authoritarian, far-right... Based on hundreds of crowd-sourced records of No Kings Day event turnout, and extrapolating for the cities where we don't have data yet, it looks like roughly 4-6m people protested Trump across the U.S. yesterday. Mobilized anti-Trump resistance is exceeding 2017 levels. 🧵 pic.twitter.com/DOEjJ9DA30 The “No Kings” rallies follow after a spate of demonstrations against immigration raids carried out in Los Angeles and the surrounding area last week, to which Trump deployed 4,000 members of the... This story has been updated to include new estimates of protest crowd size.
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The “No Kings” Protests In Every State May Have Been
The “No Kings” protests in every state may have been the biggest day of demonstrations in American history, a data analyst has suggested. “Based on hundreds of crowd-sourced records of No Kings Day event turnout, and extrapolating for the cities where we don’t have data yet, it looks like roughly 4-6m people protested Trump across the U.S. yesterday,” independent data journalist G Elliott posted t...
Mobilized Anti-Trump Resistance Is Exceeding 2017 Levels. 🧵 Pic.twitter.com/DOEjJ9DA30 The
Mobilized anti-Trump resistance is exceeding 2017 levels. 🧵 pic.twitter.com/DOEjJ9DA30 The “No Kings” rallies follow after a spate of demonstrations against immigration raids carried out in Los Angeles and the surrounding area last week, to which Trump deployed 4,000 members of the National Guard... This resonnated so very deeply with me: Part of the aim of protests is also about the emotional re...
The Evidence Of Large Protests Increasing Is Perfect For Leading
The evidence of large protests increasing is perfect for leading to the creation of a WORLD-WIDE UNITY CAMPAIGN based on a commonality so that the people in every country participate. By working together for a commonality, we can resolve our differences. Research has shown that the basic common denominators to unite are the “welfare of the children” and “no violence.” The people in every country w...
No Kings Protests: A Record-Breaking Demonstration? Recent Estimates Suggest The
No Kings Protests: A Record-Breaking Demonstration? Recent estimates suggest the "No Kings" protests held last weekend may have been one of the largest single-day demonstrations in United States history. Data journalist G. Elliott Morris, using data from various locations, calculated a turnout between 4 and 6 million people, representing 1.2% to 1.8% of the US population. This figure could potenti...
He Then Used The Median Attendance From Locations With Data
He then used the median attendance from locations with data to approximate the numbers for unreported protests, aiming to control for the impact of large city events. While the tally remains unofficial, it aligns with an estimate of 5 million people provided by Ezra Levin, co-founder of Indivisible, the organization behind the event. However, not all experts agree on the final ranking. Jeremy Pres...