Eric Galatas, Producer
Thursday, June 12, 2025
As President Donald Trump celebrates his birthday on Saturday with a $45 million military parade in the nation's capital, organizers are expecting a big turnout for alternative "No Kings" programming in Grand Junction and some 1,800 other sites across Colorado and the United States. According to the event's website, protesters aim to spotlight growing authoritarianism within an administration that has defied courts, disappeared and deported Americans, and deployed active military personnel on U.S. soil.
Mallory Martin, Grand Junction organizer with the group Indivisible, said since the moment this nation was founded, 'we the people' don't do kings.
"We have a constitutional republic, and we really want our president to follow the rule of law, to be respectful of our constitution, and to give people the due process that they deserve," she said.
A list of protest sites is available at 'NoKings.org.' Trump's defenders say the president is making good on campaign promises to deport immigrants, to remake government by disrupting entrenched bureaucrats branded as the "deep state," and to push back against so-called activist judges. In the 2024 election, American voters gave Trump an electoral college victory and wins in all swing states. Trump was also the first Republican president to capture the popular vote since George W. Bush in 2004.
Martin said regardless of who won the last election, American presidents take an oath to protect and uphold the U.S. Constitution, in which the executive branch is co-equal to Congress and the Judiciary. She believes too many of Trump's executive orders are testing democracy's guardrails.
"And so many of them are being found to be unconstitutional," she continued. "He then goes after those judges, many of whom he appointed in the first place, and calls them radical leftists."
More than 45 events are planned throughout Colorado from Greeley to Trinidad, Cortez, Gunnison, Steamboat Springs and in metro areas along the Front Range.
Wendy Petry, a Grand Valley community organizer, said people in Colorado and across the U.S. will have to step up to heal the nation and build a future that works for all Americans.
"People who have checked out of politics because it has become so unpleasant can check back in; they just need to join the movement," she said. "We need more people to check back in, just to make it clear that they're not happy with what's happening in Washington."
get more stories like this via email

Health and Wellness
A Wisconsin nonprofit serving people with disabilities is waiting to hear if federal changes to Medicaid will affect their clients and caregivers…
By Ilana Newman for The Daily Yonder.Broadcast version by Eric Galatas for Colorado News Connection for the Public News Service/Daily Yonder Collabora…
Health and Wellness
Nearly 1,000 New Mexicans have already accessed a new online portal which provides transparency about how much the cost of prescriptions and medical p…
Social Issues
Uncertainty about the current job market is influencing high school graduates' choices for a career. Parents are generally the go-to for guidance…
Social Issues
The mayor of Lancaster, Pennsylvania is voicing concerns about the state budget delay, warning it could affect the city's more than 58,000 residents…
Social Issues
Almost 3.5 million Texans utilize the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program to purchase food. The budget reconciliation bill recently signed …
Environment
Environmental advocates are urging Washington state lawmakers to require cargo ships to plug in while in port. The Port of Seattle will require all …
Environment
A new documentary looked at ways to reduce the human and environmental harms stemming from the mining of "critical minerals." Without minerals like c…