Donald Trump, No Kings and Minnesota
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President Donald Trump has argued that he needs to deploy National Guard troops across state lines to protect federal personnel and property or to support overwhelmed local law enforcement in cities he claims are “overrun” by crime.
The protests are in response to policies enacted by President Donald Trump that organizers call “authoritarian ... Start times vary by location, with the one in downtown Minneapolis slated to begin at 1 p.m. A map of planned protests and start times ...
Another round of "No Kings" protests about President Donald Trump is expected to hit Minnesota. Protests slated in St. Cloud and Long Prairie.
Tim Walz said he anticipates President Donald Trump will send troops to the ... comes on the day new reporting indicates crime is falling in Minneapolis across all major categories. In June, Trump deployed the National Guard to California to quell protests ...
The governor said Minnesota is prepared to fight the Trump administration in court and "follow all the laws as they're written to challenge them on this."
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey said his city “proudly welcomes immigrants, refugees, and families seeking opportunity” and won't back down. “Donald Trump has built his career on attacking immigrants and dividing Americans, and now he’s dragging our ...
After announcing that he was deploying the National Guard to Memphis, Trump was asked Monday why he signed an order lowering flags nationwide after Kirk’s killing during an event in Utah, but didn’t do so after former Democratic state House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband were shot and killed in June.
Several towns and cities in Ohio and Northern Kentucky will host "No Kings" protests on Oct. 18. Here's where they are.