no kings march brooklyn

Thousands of people marched from Grand Army Plaza to Bartel Pritchard Square to denounce President Donald Trump and his policies as part of the nationwide No Kings march on Saturday, Oct. 18.

Photo by Lloyd Mitchell

Roughly 3,000 Brooklynites marched through Park Slope on Saturday to denounce President Donald Trump and his cabinet as part of the nationwide No Kings march. 

Waving signs and banners with slogans like “United We Stand, divided Democracy Falls” and “Kings Are For Fairytales,” protestors of all ages marched from Grand Army Plaza to Bartel Pritchard Square, pushing back against the administration’s “chaos, corruption, and cruelty.” 

man with no kings sign in park slope A man walks with a No King sign during a march in Park Slope, Brooklyn on Oct. 18. Photo by Lloyd Mitchell no kings march brooklyn people with american flag and strollerThousands of Brooklynites from all ages took part in the march. Photo by Lloyd Mitchell

The first round of No Kings marches swept across the country in June — on the same day as Trump’s “Grand Military Parade” — in opposition to presidential policies and actions seen as authoritarian. Just five months later, the scope of the protest had grown, as New Yorkers pushed back against mass arrests of immigrants by masked federal agents, the deployment of federal forces to cities around the U.S., damaging spending cuts, the ongoing government shutdown, and more. 

In recent weeks, Trump has frozen billions of dollars in funding for infrastructure projects in New York City and attempted to take back $34 million in security funding from the MTA because the agency is “based in a Sanctuary Jurisdiction city.”

person with halloween decorations labeled as kristi noem and stephen millerOne Brooklynite decorated ghostly Halloween decorations with the names of top Trump advisors and cabinet members. Photo by Lloyd Mitchell person with no kings only queens sign Signs ranged from angry to humorous, but all bore the same message: No Kings. Photo by Lloyd Mitchell

The president has also vowed to cut federal funding to New York City if Zohran Mamdani wins the mayoral election and denounced the candidate as a communist. 

“The Cheeto has some nerve calling anyone anything, look at what he’s doing to this wonderful country,” said one Brooklyn marcher, Phil Marks. 

The first No Kings event in Brooklyn drew a crowd of just about 250 people, organizers said, and the crowd grew exponentially in the space of just four months.

Marchers voiced their displeasure with the Trump Administration during the No Kings March. Photo by Lloyd Mitchell woman at no kings in park slopeA woman wears an anti- President Trump hat during the No Kings March in Park Slope.Photo by Lloyd Mitchell

Brooklyn’s march was a companion to the anchor protest in Manhattan, which drew a crowd of roughly 100,000 people. Organizers said online that the Park Slope march was an alternative to “accommodate local people” who couldn’t get to Manhattan — but urged Brooklynites to head to the main march “if at all possible.”

A number of Brooklyn’s local elected officials marched in Manhattan — including U.S. Rep. Nydia Velázquez and Council Members Chi Ossé and Alexa Avilés.

no kings velazquez and simonCongresswoman Nydia Velázquez (second from left) and Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon at the Manhattan No Kings rally.Photo by Gabriele Holtermann chi osse and alexa aviles no kingsNew York City Council Members Alexa Avilés and Chi Ossé (second and third from left) joined the Manhattan No Kings rally. Photo by Lloyd Mitchell

I joined 10s of thousands of New Yorkers today to say it loud and clear: No to tyranny. No to cruelty. No to kings in America,” Velázquez said on X. “The GOP can smear these protests all they want, but they can’t silence the truth. Americans are fed up with their authoritarian agenda.”