World | Europe
8 Million People Just Took to the Streets Against Trump — and the White House Called It 'A Rainy Afternoon'
More than 8 million people rallied in 3,300+ locations across the US and abroad on March 28. Here is what the White House said, what the crowd actually looked like, and what happens next.
More than 8 million people rallied in 3,300+ locations across the US and abroad on March 28. Here is what the White House said, what the crowd actually looked like, and what happens next.
- More than 8 million people rallied in 3,300+ locations across the US and abroad on March 28.
- The Trump administration's response to the largest single-day protest movement in American political history was delivered by press secretary Karoline Leavitt at a 2 p.
- The No Kings Day demonstrations of March 28, 2026 were remarkable not primarily for their scale, though that scale was extraordinary, but for their geography.
More than 8 million people rallied in 3,300+ locations across the US and abroad on March 28.
The Trump administration's response to the largest single-day protest movement in American political history was delivered by press secretary Karoline Leavitt at a 2 p.m. briefing: 'A small group of radical leftists walked around in some cities. We're focused on governing.' Outside, in those same cities, estimates compiled by independent crowd science firms suggested that a minimum of 8 million people — and potentially significantly more — had gathered at more than 3,300 events across all 50 US states and abroad.
The No Kings Day demonstrations of March 28, 2026 were remarkable not primarily for their scale, though that scale was extraordinary, but for their geography. Two thirds of participants, organizers reported, were not in major metropolitan areas. They were in Florence, Alabama. In Casper, Wyoming. In rural Montana towns that haven't seen a political rally since a county fair decades ago. One event in Gallup, New Mexico drew more people than the town's registered voter count.
In Europe, around 20,000 people marched across cities including Amsterdam, Madrid, and Rome. In Paris, a crowd gathered at the Bastille — chosen deliberately for its revolutionary symbolism — where Ada Shen, the Paris organizer, told the crowd: 'I protest all of Trump's illegal, immoral, reckless and feckless endless wars.' In Rome, the protest merged with anti-Iran-war sentiment, and demonstrators took the opportunity to also criticize Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni.
In New York, Oscar-winning actor Robert De Niro took a stage in Central Park and told a crowd estimated at over 150,000 that Trump represented 'an existential threat to our freedoms and security.' In Washington DC, marchers carried banners reading 'Trump Must Go Now' and 'Fight Fascism' as they filled the National Mall. 'He keeps lying and lying and lying,' one protester told AFP. 'And no one says anything.'
The political math behind the protests is what makes this moment different from the 2017 Women's March or other Trump-era demonstrations. The No Kings movement has explicitly targeted non-Democratic voters and non-urban participants. Internal tracking by organizers suggests approximately 18 percent of attendees self-identify as former Republican voters or political independents. That number, if accurate, represents a qualitative shift in the movement's composition.
Trump's approval rating has slipped below 40 percent in three consecutive national polls, and with November midterm elections approaching, Republican Party strategists are watching closely. The party that loses the House typically does so when a president is this unpopular in the second year of a term. Whether 8 million people in the streets translates into 8 million — or 80 million — votes in November is the question that both sides are now calculating obsessively.