


Topline
President Donald Trump kicked off an unprecedented military-style parade in Washington, D.C. —commemorating the U.S. Army’s 250th anniversary and his 79th birthday—as millions across the country took to the streets to protest him, rallying against his expanded immigration raids and a spending bill projected to slash healthcare access for millions.
President Donald Trump salutes next to First Lady Melania Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ... More
Associated Press reported, citing concerns from the Texas Department of Public Safety over “a credible threat toward state lawmakers planning to attend.”
Texas law enforcement shut down the state’s capitol building in Austin and closed off surrounding areas hours before a “No Kings” protest was set to begin, themultiple outlets, though it is unclear what caused police to briefly use the dispersion tactic.
Tear gas was deployed against protesters demonstrating near Atlanta, according toMinnesota State Patrol encouraged the public to avoid planned “No Kings Day” protests in St. Paul and across the state after state Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband were killed and state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife were shot in apparent politically motivated attacks. (Go here for updates.)
TheTrump posted “This is a big day for America.”
This morning on TruthSocial,National Guard and Marines to Los Angeles, at the Supreme Court.
Capitol Police arrested around 60 veterans and military family members protesting Trump’s deployment of theThe parade is expected to begin at 6:30 p.m. local time by the Lincoln Memorial, with plans to continue down Constitution Ave. along the National Mall, past the White House and the Washington Monument and concluding with Trump’s birthday festival at 8 p.m., according to an official map for the event found on the Army’s website (see below). A White House spokesperson told NBC News that showers and thunderstorms could delay the event, with most of the day expected to be dry and cloudy. Organizers have said that the parade will go forward “rain or shine,” CBS News reports. Most major broadcast and cable news outlets, as well as the Army, plan to stream the march live.
Route of parade. (Courtesy of U.S. Army)
The scheduled large-scale protests against the parade, part of a “national day of defiance” that over 100 civil rights groups like the American Civil Liberties Union and 50501 are labeling “No Kings,” have been planned across more than 2,000 cities and towns, according to The Guardian.
Only in Texas, where Gov. Greg Abbott has ordered the deployment of more than 5,000 Texas National Guard troops on Thursday, as well as over 2,000 state police, to “maintain order at these protests,” he posted on X. In Mississippi, nearly 280 National Guard members were activated, but to help security in D.C. Nearly 4,000 guard members and 700 Marines have been deployed to Los Angeles since the beginning of the protests there.
WTOP News reported “tight security” in place for Saturday’s festival and parade, with separate security entrances for each event. A Secret Service agent told WTOP there will be 18-and-a-half miles of antiscale fencing, 17 miles of bike racks, concrete barriers, 175 magnetometers and officers from federal, state and local agencies.