Let’s go ahead and be clear: when you name something “No Kings,” you’re already setting a tone.
You’re saying this isn’t about hierarchy. This isn’t about who’s above who. This is about people showing up, standing side by side, and reminding everybody where power actually lives.
And on Saturday, March 28, 2026, at 12:00 noon, that’s exactly what happened.
A little over 1,000 residents gathered across two locations, Warburton and Odell Avenue in Yonkers, and Warburton and Spring Street in Hastings-on-Hudson, for the third iteration of the No Kings Rally, co-sponsored by Concerned Families of Westchester (CFOW), NAACP-Yonkers Branch, NYCD16/15-Indivisible, and Safeguarding Democracy.
What stood out wasn’t just the turnout.
It was how people arrived.
Not rushed. Not scattered. Just steady. Conversations already in motion. Signs are being adjusted with care. People greeted each other like they understood they were part of something shared before anything officially began.
Two Spaces, One Movement
Each location held its own energy, songs, chants, rally cries, but there was already a connection between them.

Two starting points.
One direction.
As both groups moved toward the roundabout, the rhythm stayed consistent. Footsteps in sync without trying. Conversations continuing mid-stride. A collective movement that didn’t need instructions to stay aligned.
When both groups met, there was no dramatic pause.
No announcement marking the moment.
Just a seamless merge.
As if the space had already been prepared for everyone to arrive together.
The Soundtrack Carried the Message
At the roundabout, the music took over, not as background, but as reinforcement.
Public Enemy’s Fight the Power moved through the crowd with familiarity.
Freedom by Beyoncé featuring Kendrick Lamar carried weight that landed differently across the space.
Bob Dylan’s Blowing in the Wind added reflection.
Marvin Gaye’s What’s Goin’ On grounded the moment in something deeper.
The songs didn’t interrupt the rally.
They framed it.
Organized With Intention
The rally was co-sponsored by Concerned Families of Westchester (CFOW), NAACP-Yonkers Branch, NYCD16/15-Indivisible, and Safeguarding Democracy, with coordination led by Joel Feldman.
Event staff, four representatives from each organization, were visible through custom tags and moved through the space with purpose.
They guided without controlling.
Supported without interrupting.
Held the structure in place while allowing the experience to remain open and participatory.
Setting the Tone
The rally opened with a welcome and purpose led by Kisha Skipper and Eileen O’Connor, followed by acknowledgments of co-sponsors and remarks from John Baer and Sue McAnanaama.
The message remained clear and consistent:
Defend Democracy
No War
Fight Back
Solidarity / Unity
Community
No extra language. No confusion.
Just direction.
Kisha Skipper Held the Moment Together
And then there was the part that doesn’t always get named.
Because hosting is visible.
But holding a space like this?
That’s something else entirely.
Kisha Skipper didn’t just guide the program, she maintained its rhythm.
Screenshot
Screenshot
Facilitating an open mic with more than 30 speakers requires presence on its own. But doing that while relaying real-time directives from local police, ensuring both engagement and safety, requires awareness that extends beyond the microphone.
The transitions stayed smooth.
The energy stayed consistent.
The space remained both structured and open.
That balance doesn’t happen by accident.
The People Were the Center
More than 30 speakers stepped forward.
Not curated for polish.
Curated for truth.
People of all ages, races, ethnicities, and communities took the mic.
Senior voices like Joanne Robinson Bottcher.
Youth voices like Jonas Baer, grandson of Safeguarding Democracy leader John Baer.
And Thomas Hoffman, a Holocaust survivor, whose testimony brought a stillness that didn’t need to be explained.
Each voice added to the shape of the day.
Presence Over Position
Elected officials joined, offering brief remarks and standing with the crowd:
Senator Andrea Stewart-Cousins.
Senator Shelley Mayer.
County Legislator David Imamura.
Yonkers City Council Member Corazon Pineda-Issac.
Greenburgh Town Board Member Ellen Hendrix.
Ardsley Trustee Barry McGoey.
They participated.
They stood alongside.
They remained part of the space, not separate from it.
Music, Reflection, and Closing Moments
As the rally continued, the tone shifted.
Live music, with guitars and a trumpet, played by Howard, Phillip, and Aaron, introduced a more reflective pace.
“This Land is Your Land” was shared across voices.
A brief moment of silence followed, honoring service members on active duty and their families.
The silence held.
Then it transitioned.
Kory Skipper-Miller led “When the Saints Go Marching In,” and the closing carried forward rather than closing out.
No Kings. Just People.
By the end, the movement slowed but didn’t stop.
People lingered. Conversations continued. The space remained active even as the program concluded.
Because what took place wasn’t just a rally.
It was a collective presence.
A little over 1,000 people standing, moving, and speaking with shared purpose.
No crowns.
No thrones.
Just people.
And that’s the kind of power that doesn’t need a crown.