Good Trouble Lives On anti-Trump protest
Digest more
Protests and events against President Donald Trump's controversial policies that include mass deportations and cuts to Medicaid and other safety nets for poor people are planned at more than 1,600 locations around the country.
The 'Good Trouble' protests are part of a nationwide mobilization to honor the late Congressman John Lewis and to protest the Trump administration.
Jamie Sanchez, owner of The Drip Café in Denver, which employs formerly homeless people, has encountered regular protests from communists.
Pentagon confirms that 2,000 California National Guard members are being withdrawn from the mission to protect federal buildings and personnel that followed ICE protests.
In Kenya, widespread antigovernment protests have escalated into deadly unrest and a deepening political crisis.
The Trump administration is cutting the number of National Guard members in the Los Angeles area by 2,000 after their deployment last month in response to immigration protests, the Pentagon announced Tuesday.
Protests called "Good Trouble Lives On" are scheduled for July 17, 2025, five years after the death of John Lewis. The protests oppose President Trump's policies and are considered a follow-up to the "No Kings" protests held on June 14,