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Thousands of residents from across metro Atlanta mobilized on Saturday morning for the โNo Kingsโ rallies against the actions of the Trump administration.
Rallies in Downtown and Midtown Atlanta, Tucker, and Decatur were just four of thousands happening across the United States and abroad. The protests came amid ongoing raids and arrests by the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in Los Angeles and other cities.
The rallies are also happening on the same day that President Donald Trump is holding a military parade in Washington D.C., ostensibly to honor the 250th anniversary of the founding of the U.S. Army, but it also happens to be Trumpโs 79th birthday. The parade is expected to cost taxpayers between a reported $25 to $45 million.
At the State Capitol, an estimated 7,500 people packed into Liberty Plaza and the streets outside. There were no reports of violence or arrests, although members of the far right extremist group, Proud Boys, were booed as they marched through the area.
Just outside Tucker, thousands of people lined the streets during the 11:30 rally that started at the Northlake Festival Shopping Center and progressed to the I-285 exit bridge.
The group organizing the rally, Pocketbook Brigade, estimated the crowd at about 5,000.
The crowd held up signs along Lavista near Briarcliff roads and encouraged drivers-by to honk in support of the โNo Kingsโ rally. Many people, especially children, were wearing Burger King crowns, with the word โBurgerโ replaced with โNo.โ
Other chanted, โLetโs impeach Donald Trump, weโve had enough,โ and โWe believe in liberty, not a monarchy,โ while holding signs that said, โNo Faux Kingsโ and โTuck Frump.โ
Rick Fedder, a member of the Pocketbook Brigade, said he had not seen any signs of counter-protesters, although the DeKalb Police would be called if any unrest occurred.
โWeโve talked to the police and they know we are here, and ready if needed,โ Fedder said.
And outside The Piedmont at Buckhead senior living center, residents held their own mini-โNo Kingsโ rally on the sidewalk, waving placards with messages about โSave Medicareโ and โStop the Pain.โ



Hundreds of people lined the sidewalks spanning both sides of the 17th Street Bridge in Midtown near Atlantic Station for the 1 p.m. protest rally. Organizers using megaphones repeated chants like โTell me what democracy looks like,โ prompting a collective response from the crowd of โThis is what democracy looks like.โ
Signs held by protesters on 17th Street ranged from โProtect Trans Kids Livesโ and โNo Kings Since 1776โ to โATL Resistโ and โIce in sweet tea. No ICE in our communities.โ A long banner reading โTrump Must Go Nowโ faced traffic traveling south on the Connector (I-75/I-85).

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
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