Brace Yourself For Anti-Ice Protests
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Anti-Trump 'No Kings' Protests Spread Across Nation
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Follow along for live updates as thousands of people nationwide have shown up at protests and rallies opposing ICE raids.
Protests unfolding nationwide against President Donald Trump’s immigration agenda come as Immigration and Customs Enforcement races to meet White House arrest quotas.
The protest was dubbed “No Kings,” and was part of worldwide demonstrations Saturday targeting the Trump Administration. No Kings is also a reference to fears by some that President Trump is making moves more akin to that of an unchecked monarch. During her brief address, Titus quipped that “Elvis is the only king we want in Las Vegas.”
Tear gas was fired into a crowd of protesters in Las Vegas. At least eight people in Seattle were arrested as a protest was declared illegal. Police detained 10 people in another day of protest in New York.
Denver police arrested 18 individuals during an "ICE Out!" immigration protest, with tensions over ICE policies sparking demonstrations and officials responding to potential conflict.
LMPD said officers didn't make any arrests during the rally or march that was attended by an estimated 4,000 people.
NBC News Correspondent David Noriega joins Meet the Press NOW from Los Angeles as protests against ICE continue into their sixth day. NBC News Senior Homeland Security Correspondent Julia Ainsley, Chief White House Correspondent Peter Alexander and Senior National Security Correspondent Courtney Kube report on the Trump administration’s response to growing protests nationwide.
Demonstrations across the country cropped up to oppose ICE raids, while others gathered in counties neighboring Los Angeles. Some of the protests were launched by union members in response to the ...
Activists march on South Carpenter Street in the Lower West Side neighborhood to protest recent ICE arrests in the city and around the country Sunday June 8, 2025, in Chicago. The protest started at the Plaza Tenochtitlán and ended at Benito Juarez Community Academy. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)