Sunday, October 19, 2025

UPDATED

‘We the People Will Rule!’: Millions Turn Out for ‘No Kings’ Protests Against Trump Tyranny

“As Trump and his henchmen take our democracy apart, we are called by our future to rescue it,” a progressive congressional candidate in Maine said at one of more than 2,700 scheduled protests.


A person dressed in a Statue of Liberty costume participates in a “No Kings” national day of protest in New York City on October 18, 2025.
(Photo by Timothy A Clary/AFP via Getty Images)

Brett Wilkins
Oct 18, 2025
COMMON DREAMS

Democracy defenders took to the streets Saturday in big cities and small towns from coast to coast and around the world to protest President Donald Trump’s authoritarianism and to show the world that “America has no kings, and the power belongs to the people.”

Organizers said that more than 2,700 No Kings rallies are scheduled in every state and more than a dozen nations, in what could be the “largest protest in US history” in one day. Saturday’s demonstrations followed June 14 No Kings protests that drew millions of people.






“I think that this is going to be a stronger push than the last one,” Hunter Dunn of 50501, a progressive organization that is one of the event’s organizers, told The New York Times.

“I’m seeing more of an emphasis on the understanding that this is not just a sprint,” he added. “We are seeing a difference in the understanding of the general public, that this is a marathon.”

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) headlined a massive rally in Washington, DC.



“ Mike Johnson, the Republican speaker of the House, called these rallies ‘Hate America’ events,” Sanders told a huge crowd in Washington, DC. “Why does he have it wrong? Millions of Americans are coming out today not because they hate America, we’re here today because we love America.”

“Today... in this dangerous moment in American history, our message is... no, President Trump, we don’t want you or any other king to rule us,” Sanders continued. “We will not move toward authoritarianism in America. We the People will rule!”



Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) also spoke at the DC rally, telling the crowd that “the truth is that Donald Trump is the most corrupt president in the history of the United States of America.”

“The truth is that he is enacting a detailed, step-by step plan to try to destroy all of the things that protect our democracy—free speech, fair elections, an independent press, the right to protest,” Murphy continued.

“But the truth is also this: He has not won yet, the people still rule in this country,” the senator added. “And today, all across America, in numbers that may eclipse any day of protest in our nation’s history, Americans are saying loudly and proudly that we are a free people.”

Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) fired up an enthusiastic crowd in Seattle, affirming that “we will not back down, we will not give in” to Trump’s authoritarianism and lawlessness.



“It would be easy to look around us at what’s happening and throw up our hands, be angry, be frustrated, blame someone else, or just disengage, because there’s too much hate and corruption, cruelty, and violence,” Jayapal said.

She added that Trump is “clearly not well,” calling him a “wannabe king who dehumanizes trans people and immigrants, and Black people, and poor people to distract you from his real agenda.”

Jayapal decried a president “who sends National Guard troops and masked men into our cities, militarizing our streets, kidnapping and disappearing tens of thousands of people from our communities, and trying very hard to suppress our dissent.”

“We are not caving in,” she said. “Right now, let’s show the power of this movement... We are the people’s movement that will save our democracy.”

Saturday’s rallies were peaceful, joyous events, replete with signs inscribed with creative slogans like “Our Huddled Masses Will Defeat Your Fascist Asses” and “No Crown for the Clown!”



In Chicago, rallygoers erected a paper machete guillotine in Grant Park, where Black Sabbath’s “War Pigs” blared from loudspeakers.

“No sign is big enough to list all the reasons I’m here,” 26-year-old protester Mackayla Reilley told the Chicago Sun-Times. “With everything going on in Chicago, we have to protect immigrants [and] we have to stand up against Trump. We can’t normalize this type of polarization and this type of partisanship.”


In Nashville, Tennessee, 9-year-old Iris Spragens who was attending a rally with her parents, told the Tennessee Lookout that she wished country music icon Dolly Parton were president.

“We don’t want Trump to be king because he can be mean to a lot of immigrants and he kicks out a lot of immigrants,” Spragens said.




Wendy MacConnell, a grandmother who also attended the Nashville protest, told the Lookout that Trump and Republicans are “trying to whitewash this to make it seem like America doesn’t want this—but look around, look around at all these people.”

In Pueblo, Colorado, around 2,000 people rallied at the Pueblo County Government Lawn.

“What the community is doing here today is coming together and saying we won’t take this, we want to be listened to and the people we elect should be listening to the people who vote them in,” 23-year-old Sydney Haney told KRCC, explaining that she was attending to protest US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) abducting members of her community and attacks on the Constitution, reproductive rights, and healthcare.



In Bangor, Maineprogressive congressional candidate Matt Dunlap told the crowd: “A dangerous time is again upon us. It is bad, and it can get worse, as Trump and his henchmen take our democracy apart, we are called by our future to rescue it.”

“We can and must do more,” Dunlap added. “We owe it to ourselves and the future of this nation to be bold and not afraid, to be hopeful and not despondent, to strive for our independence and reject subjugation by a king.”

In Atlanta, protester Linda Kelley told Fox 5 that “we are so close to being Germany, 1938, and it’s so terrifying.”

“I never thought in my lifetime we’d be somewhere like this,” she added. “People don’t realize what will happen if we don’t stand up.”



Democratic San Diego County Supervisor Paloma Aguirre told KPBS in downtown San Diego that “I am here today in solidarity, so that we cannot continue to accept that our constitutional rights continue to be eroded and taken away from us.”

“We have the right to free speech, we have the right to free press, we have the right to have our families not be separated in the dark of night and dragged away,” Aguirre added.

'No Kings' anti-Trump protests across US
DW with AP, AFP, Reuters, dpa

Millions attended the latest "No Kings" protests, which come as Trump has moved to deploy the National Guard in major cities. The US president is also targeting his political enemies. DW has the latest.


Demonstrators carried signs and some wore inflatable costumes, such as the Pikachu seen above
Image: Tom Hudson/ZUMA/dpa/picture alliance


WATCH - Mass 'No Kings' anti-Trump protests against authoritarianism

Protesters at the rallies accuse the Trump administration of authoritarian policies — from immigration crackdowns and mass firings of federal workers to attacks on the media and judicial independence.

In Washington, Senator Bernie Sanders accused Republicans of serving the wealthiest one percent and warned against a slide toward authoritarianism, declaring that "we the people will rule."

Republicans have dismissed the protests as "hate America" rallies, while participants in states like Florida said they were defending democracy and the US Constitution.

Millions across US join mass 'No Kings' anti-Trump protests


 Nearly 7 million join 'No Kings' rallies, organizers say

Nearly 7 million people turned up for the "No Kings" protests against Donald Trump and his administration, marking the largest single-day demonstration against a sitting president in modern US history, organizers said.

The figure is higher than protests in June, which drew more than 5 million people, organizers added.

The numbers could not be independently verified, but Saturday's protests saw millions of people join marches in over 2,500 cities and towns in all 50 states.

“Authoritarians want us to believe resistance is futile, but every person who turned out today proved the opposite," said Ezra Levin, a co-founder of Indivisible, one of the organizers.

But several officials in the Trump administration have sought to downplay the size of the protests.

"Marked safe from kings in DC, since there aren’t any here," assistant attorney general
 Harmeet Dhillon posted to X.
https://p.dw.com/p/52EMX

The NYPD said it made 'zero protest-related arrests'Image: Shannon Stapleton/REUTERS

Over 100,000 people protested peacefully across all five boroughs of New York as part of the wider "No Kings" protest, the New York Police Department said late on Saturday.

"The majority of the No Kings protests have dispersed at this time and all traffic closures have been lifted," NYPD wrote on X.


The police department added that it made "zero protest-related arrests."

DW correspondent Benjamin Alvarez Gruber is present at the "No Kings" rally in Washington, DC. Watch below for his insight into the event.
Sanders railed against Trump and said that the Trump administration only serves the interests of the richImage: Kylie Cooper/REUTERS

US Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, known for his progressive views, spoke at the "No Kings" rally in Washington, DC.

"We're here because we love America," Sanders told attendees, rejecting comments from Republican lawmakers that the event is a "hate America rally."



He said that the "American experiment" is in danger as Trump moves to gain more power for himself and for "oligarchs." Sanders, an independent, said the US political system has been hijacked by the ultra wealthy who seek to make themselves richer at the expense of working people.

"We will not move toward authoritarianism in America. We the people will rule," he said.

IN PICTURES: 'No Kings' rallies across the US


Thousands gathered for a demonstration in New York City's Times SquareImage: Seth Harrison/Imagn Images/IMAGO
Protesters in Washington D.C. demonstrated in front of the Capitol as a US government shutdown continuesImage: Tom Hudson/ZUMA/dpa/picture alliance
Protesters gathered in Philadelphia, a Democratic stronghold in the key presidential swing state of PennsylvaniaImage: Matthew Hatcher/AFP
Protesters march in Chicago, a city where Trump has ramped up federal immigration efforts, with the president also attempting to deploy the National Guard in the cityImage: Scott Olson/Getty Images/AFP
Protesters turned out in the small city of Canton, Georgia, which is located in heavily pro-Trump Cherokee CountyImage: Robin Rayne/ZUMA/picture alliance
Protesters rallied in Oregon's largest city of Portland, where Trump had attempted to send the National GuardImage: John Rudoff/REUTERS
Protesters in Los Angeles mocked TrumpImage: Daniel Cole/REUTERS
Another demo took place in Oakland, California which is near San Francisco
Image: Yalonda M. James/San Francisco Chronicle/AP Photo/picture alliance

‘Manhattan straight up no ICE’: New Yorkers unite at anti-Trump march


By AFP
October 19, 2025


People flood New York's Times Square during a 'No Kings' national day of protest - Copyright AFP TIMOTHY A.CLARY
Maggy DONALDSON

Nadja Rutkowski said protest is her way of life: she immigrated to the US from Germany at 14 and demonstrates for fear fascist history could repeat itself.

She was among the thousands of New Yorkers who marched down Broadway from Times Square Saturday during mass anti-Trump protests, where demonstrators rejected what many referred to as the “tyranny” of today’s White House.

As pro-democracy chants rang out, Rutkowski voiced outrage over what she called the Republican president’s attack on human rights that includes an aggressive crackdown on undocumented migrants.

“I come from a country where what is happening now has happened already before in 1938,” she told AFP, her dog Bella — who is also a seasoned protester — in tow.

“People are being snatched up from the streets,” she said. “We know, we see it, it’s happening in real time. So we’ve got to stand up.”

The sentiment was an unequivocal theme of Saturday’s demonstration in New York, the city where Donald Trump was born and made his name — but where the majority of residents vehemently spurn him.

“I like my Manhattan straight up no ICE,” read one of many similar placards, referring to the whisky cocktail bearing the name of New York’s most prominent borough.

ICE is the federal enforcement agency that has been detaining undocumented migrants and even American citizens in escalating raids across the United States — and the target of fury from protestors.

“We are in a crisis,” said Colleen Hoffman, 69, citing “the cruelty of this regime” and its aura of “authoritarianism.”

“If we don’t stick together, if we don’t raise our voices, then we’ve surrendered to it. I refuse to surrender.”

– ‘This is our flag too’ –

Saturday’s peaceful protest in New York was among some 2,700 nationwide; there were multiple demonstrations just within the city’s five boroughs.

Demonstrators were fervent in message but jovial in spirit: colorful costumes included one person dressed as the Mr. Met baseball mascot, wielding a sign that said “No Kings But Queens” in a reference to the borough the beloved baseball team comes from.

Gavin Michaels is a 26-year-old actor currently in an off-Broadway play about the rise of Nazi Germany — in which he portrays a young soldier “easily seduced” by the promises of a job and health care.

He called the role in “Crooked Cross,” a dramatization of a prophetic 1930s-era novel, “terrifyingly relevant” to today’s America.

“You see the administration pulling health care away from people but offering sign-up bonuses if you join ICE,” he told AFP.

But Michaels said he was heartened by joining his fellow New Yorkers on the streets: “It’s exciting,” he said, to see “other people who care.”

“We spend so much of our lives inside or on the internet and it’s nice to actually see people in person willing to do something or say something or stand up for something.

Along with signs bearing anti-fascist, anti-racist, anti-Trump messaging, many protestors wielded American flags.

Some even wore them: Mike Misner donned the Stars and Stripes as a cape.

“I want to say this is our flag too,” he told AFP, bemoaning the fact that conservative factions in the US have “made the flag theirs, as if they’re the only ones who could be patriotic.”

“Our country is under attack. Our democracy is under attack,” he said. “And this flag to me represents democracy.”


For No Kings Day, I wore an inflatable bear costume – and saw America in all its glory

Sabrina Haake
October 19, 2025 
RAW STORY


The No Kings protest in Chicago. Picture provided by Sabrina Haake.

This week, blind to constitutional law and US history, Trump Border Czar Tom Homan said that protesting ICE “could lead to bloodshed and people dying.”

By suggesting that masked ICE agents could kill protestors for simply shouting hateful things at them, Homan was building the permission structure for federal agents to use “full force” violence against non-violent protestors.

More than that, his statement was meant to groom the public. The Trump administration is trying to get US citizens used to the idea that federal agents could use lethal force — to the point of killing people — against anyone who exercises their constitutional right to peacefully protest government actions they don’t like.

On too many videos circulating on social media to count, masked ICE agents have been recorded getting more and more aggressive with members of the public, deliberately escalating non-violent exchanges into violent ones.

Federal agents have been caught on video body slamming people to the ground, kneeling on people’s necks, and pointing armed weapons at close range. More than 20 people have died at ICE’s hands, including US citizens, but this tally is artificially low because the Trump administration tightly controls media access to ICE detention facilities.

Team Trump has no idea what the First Amendment means


Homan, like Trump, seems oblivious to what the First Amendment says.

“Congress shall make no law … abridging the freedom of speech … or the right of the people peaceably to assemble…”

This protection was extended from Congress, or the federal government, to the states in 1868 through the passage of the 14th Amendment.


It was the very first amendment to the Constitution, and was the key to getting states to go along with the Constitution at all. Many states refused to sign or support the Constitution after it was drafted in 1787 because they were fearful of a strong federal government with no constraints to protect people from overreach. It was the sticking point that refused to yield, as the objecting states would not support the Constitution without a guarantee of individual liberties, including freedom of religion and, most importantly, the freedom to speak openly, to gather, and to criticize the government.

James Madison rose to the challenge and drafted the First Amendment, the language of which remains to this day, and has never been changed.
The world is envious of our freedom of speech

Freedom of speech beyond the reach or control of the government stands as a beacon of freedom throughout the world, a marker of man’s evolution from the Dark Ages when rulers often punished and tortured people for their beliefs.

That’s why Trump’s Executive Order declaring that the federal government would now punish dissenters, whom he labelled “domestic terrorists,” sends chills down the spine of anyone who has the slightest concept of world history.

People in MAGA who support Trump’s centralized thought control have no concept of what it’s like to live under authoritarian rule. In ChinaXi Jinping has installed facial recognition software into China's public security apparatus, where it records everyone at cross lights, bus stops, transport hubs and in public spaces. Xi uses it for mass surveillance, to record, identify, track and persecute anyone who criticizes the government.

Russia’s Vladimir Putin is just as bad. Aside from famously having critics poisoned, or pushed out of helicopters and windows, Putin has imposed severe prison sentences of up to 15 years for spreading "deliberately false information" about the Russian military.

Last week, Trump’s Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth tried something similar. Hegseth announced new rules threatening journalists’ access to the Pentagon if they did not agree to publish only information that he wants released, and was shocked when most of the press refused to go along with it.

The faction of MAGA clamoring to relax the division between church and state today have no idea what they are asking for either. Trump’s Christo Nationalists claim the U.S. was founded by and for Christians, and that its laws and government should therefore impose Christian values over all of society. They have no understanding of world or human history, or that freedom of religion grew out of the Inquisition, when torture was common.

James Madison would be proud of No Kings Day

Yesterday, huge crowds marched in major cities, as smaller gatherings sprung up across small town USA for “No Kings” protests against the Trump administration.


On my way to the protest… Picture: Sabrina Haake

There were more than 2,500 events in all 50 states, predicted to be one of the largest demonstrations in US history.

Demonstrators spoke out against Trump’s policies, including perceived threats to democracy, ICE raids and Trump deploying military troops in US cities. The signs speak for themselves.

As I marched inside my bear inflatable, I’ve never been more proud to be an American.


Sabrina Haake is a columnist and 25+ year federal trial attorney specializing in 1st and 14th A defense. Her Substack, The Haake Take, is free.


Tens of thousands of people take to the streets in nationwide anti-Trump 'No Kings' protests


Copyright Ethan Swope/Copyright 2025 The AP. All rights reserved.

By Malek Fouda
Published on 19/10/2025 - EURONEWS


Tens of thousands of protesters flooded the streets of major US cities nationwide to demand an end to President Donald Trump’s “authoritarian” rule. Hundreds of concerned Americans abroad also staged protests in several European metropolitans.

Thousands of protesters marched and rallied in cities across the US on Saturday taking part in the “No Kings” demonstrations, decrying what participants see as the government's swift drift into authoritarianism under President Donald Trump.

People carried signs with slogans reading “Nothing is more patriotic than protesting” or “Resist Fascism" as they packed into New York City’s Times Square and rallied by the thousands in parks in Boston, Atlanta, Chicago and other metropolitans.

Demonstrators marched through Washington and downtown Los Angeles and picketed outside capitols in several Republican-led states, a courthouse in Billings, Montana, and at hundreds of smaller public spaces.

Many protesters even staged demonstrations outside buildings branded with the Trump name, like in New York and Chicago, where the US president – under his Trump organisations – owns and operates several pieces of prime downtown real estate.



People are signing a giant Constitution as they take part in a "No Kings" protest Saturday, Oct. 18, 2025, in Seattle 
Lindsey Wasson/Copyright 2025 The AP. All rights reserved.

Trump's Republican Party disparaged the demonstrations as “Hate America” rallies, but in many places the events looked more like a street party.

There were marching bands, huge banners with the US Constitution’s “We The People” preamble that people could sign, and demonstrators wearing inflatable costumes, particularly frogs, which have emerged as a sign of resistance in Portland, Oregon.

It was the third mass mobilisation since Trump's return to the White House and came against the backdrop of a government shutdown that not only has closed federal programmes and services but is testing the core balance of power, as an aggressive executive wing confronts Congress and the courts in ways that protest organisers warn are a slide toward authoritarianism.


Daniella Diener participates with other protesters in the "No Kings" rally and march in downtown Albuquerque, N.M., on Saturday, Oct. 18, 2025 Chancey Bush/Albuquerque Journal

“I fought for freedom and against this kind of extremism abroad,” said Shawn Howard, a former Iraq War Marine, who also worked at the CIA for 20 years on counter-extremism operations.

“And now I see a moment in America where we have extremists everywhere who are, in my opinion, pushing us to some kind of civil conflict,” he added.

Trump, meanwhile, was spending the weekend at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida.

“They say they’re referring to me as a king. I’m not a king,” the president said in an interview on Fox News that aired early on Friday, before he departed for a $1 million-per-head (€857,600) MAGA (Make America Great Again) fundraiser at his club.

Protesters – mainly Democrats – say they will continue to take to the streets to ensure their country’s democracy doesn’t “slip through the cracks,” and protect the Constitution, which they accuse the Trump administration of subverting
.
President Donald Trump waves after arriving on Air Force One, Friday, Oct. 17, 2025, at Palm Beach International Airport in West Palm Beach, Florida Mark Schiefelbein/Copyright 2025 The AP. All rights reserved.

They slammed Trump for trying to revoke US birthright citizenship, a right protected by the 14th amendment, which has yet to be decided on by the Supreme Court.

They also criticised his administration’s targeting of illegal immigrants, the mass immigration raids in majority-Democrat cities like Los Angeles and Chicago, which have divided and broken up families, detained and deported many people, sometimes without trial or due process.

Protesters also demanded an end to Trump’s deployment of National Guard troops across US cities to conduct civilian policing operations, calling them unnecessary and unconstitutional, and urged a restoration of local power to state-level officials.

People march with signs during the nationwide "No Kings" protest in downtown Tucson, Ariz., on Saturday, Oct. 18, 2025 Grace Trejo/Arizona Daily Star

American mobilise abroad

Several protests also took place across major European cities. The rallies were largely organised and attended by US citizens living abroad, who say they’re increasingly concerned with the Trump administration undermining their country’s global standing.

Hundreds of people gathered in Madrid, holding placards and signs reading “no man is above the law” and “No tyrants, defend democracy!”

A demonstrator holds a sign during an anti-Trump protest, in Madrid, Spain, Saturday, Oct. 18, 2025 Bernat Armangue/Copyright 2025 The AP. All rights reserved.

"The Trump Government is not respecting the institutions that every former president always has. The Republican Party is allowing that to happen. The Supreme Court seems to be ruling in his favour on everything, and we're very concerned about all that,” said William Kotes, a 66-year-old MBA admissions consultant.

"There's another agenda going on, and I think something needs to be done to stay vigilant, to stay active, and to speak out against what's happening,” said Miss Dawn, an international civil servant.

Many also protested the US president’s mixed-messaging in his support for Ukraine, following a Friday visit by the Ukrainian leader, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, to the White House.

A woman dressed like the Statue of Liberty attends a protest against U.S. President Donald Trump, in Paris, Saturday, Oct. 18, 2025 Thibault Camus/Copyright 2025 The AP. All rights reserved

Zelenskyy, who visited Washington to make his country’s case and convince Trump to sell long-range Tomahawk missiles to him, left without the weapons he desired, which many suspect was due to Russia’s Vladimir Putin dissuading Trump from supplying them.

Some protesters also criticised his unwavering support for Israel and accused the incumbent administration of complicity in what they described as a genocide in Gaza, preceding a ceasefire deal, brokered by Trump, which came into effect last week.

‘No Kings’ anti-Trump protests draw massive crowds across US


In cities and towns across the US, huge crowds took to the streets Saturday to protest against the Trump administration in the “No Kings” demonstrations, which the Republican Party condemned as “Hate America” rallies. Around seven million people attended the protests, said organisers, decrying what they called the government's drift into authoritarianism.


19/10/2025 - 
By: FRANCE 24


Thousands of protesters fill Times Square during a "No Kings" protest Saturday, October 18, 2025, in New York. © Olga Fedorova, AP

Huge crowds took to the streets in all 50 US states at "No Kings" protests on Saturday, venting anger over President Donald Trump's hardline policies, while Republicans ridiculed them as "Hate America" rallies.

Organisers said seven million people attended protests spanning New York to Los Angeles, with demonstrations popping up in small cities across the US heartland and even near Trump's home in Florida.

"This is what democracy looks like!" chanted thousands in Washington near the US Capitol, where the federal government was shut down for a third week amid a legislative deadlock.

"Hey hey ho ho, Donald Trump has got to go!" said protesters, many of them carrying American flags, at least one of which was flying upside down in a signal of distress.

Colourful signs called on people to "protect democracy," while others demanded the country abolish the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency at the centre of Trump's anti-immigrant crackdown.

Crowds walk past the Lincoln Memorial during a No Kings protest, Saturday, October 18, 2025, in Washington. © Allison Robbert, AP


Demonstrators slammed what they called the Republican billionaire's strong-arm tactics, including attacks on the media, political opponents and undocumented immigrants.

"I never thought I would live to see the death of my country as a democracy," 69-year-old retiree Colleen Hoffman told AFP as she marched down Broadway in New York.

"We are in a crisis – the cruelty of this regime, the authoritarianism. I just feel like I cannot sit home and do nothing."

In Los Angeles, protesters floated a giant balloon of Trump in a diaper.

Many flew flags, with at least one referencing pirate anime hit "One Piece", brandishing the skull logo that has recently become a staple of anti-government protests from Peru to Madagascar.

"Fight Ignorance not migrants," read one sign at a protest in Houston, where nearly one-quarter of the population is made up of immigrants, according to the Migration Policy Institute.


© France 24
06:00


It was not possible to independently verify the organizers' attendance figures. In New York, authorities said more than 100,000 gathered at one of the largest protests, while in Washington, crowds were estimated at between 8,000 and 10,000 people.


Trump responds

Trump's response to Saturday's events was typically aggressive, with the US president posting a series of AI-generated videos to his Truth Social platform depicting him as a king.

In one, he is shown wearing a crown and piloting a fighter jet that drops what appears to be feces on anti-Trump protesters.

His surrogates were in fighting form, too, with House Speaker Mike Johnson deriding the rallies as being "Hate America" protests.

"You're going to bring together the Marxists, the Socialists, the Antifa advocates, the anarchists and the pro-Hamas wing of the far-left Democrat Party," he told reporters.

Protesters treated that claim with ridicule.

"Look around! If this is hate, then someone should go back to grade school," said Paolo, 63, as the crowd chanted and sang around him in Washington.


People hold signs and flags during a "No Kings" protest Saturday, October 18, 2025, in Chicago. © Nam Y. Huh, AP

Others hinted at the deep polarization tearing apart American politics.

"Here's the thing about what right-wingers say: I don't give a crap. They hate us," said Tony, a 34-year-old software engineer.
'Country of equals'

Deirdre Schifeling of the American Civil Liberties Union said protesters wanted to convey that "we are a country of equals".

"We are a country of laws that apply to everyone, of due process and of democracy. We will not be silenced," she told reporters.

Leah Greenberg, co-founder of the Indivisible Project, slammed the Trump administration's efforts to send National Guard troops into Democratic-led US cities, including Los Angeles, Washington, Chicago, Portland and Memphis.

"It is the classic authoritarian playbook: threaten, smear and lie, scare people into submission," Greenberg said.

Paulo, at the Washington protest, said the current moment reminded him of growing up under a military dictatorship in Brazil.

"I have an incredible sensation of deja vu in terms of measures that are being taken in terms of law enforcement, in terms of cult of personality," he said.

Addressing the crowd outside the US Capitol, progressive Senator Bernie Sanders warned of the dangers democracy faced under Trump.

A PROPOS © FRANCE 24
09:11



"We have a president who wants more and more power in his own hands and in the hands of his fellow oligarchs," he said, the mention of "oligarchs" eliciting loud boos from the crowd.

Isaac Harder, 16, said he feared for his generation's future.

"They're destroying democracy. They're cracking down on peaceful protests and sending the military to American cities. They're arresting political opponents and deporting people without due process.

"It's a fascist trajectory. And I want to do anything I can to stop that."

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)

Some Signs I Saw at the No Kings Rally

If we are going to save the country, it’s clear it’s going to have to be done by the millions of people like those who attended this rally.


People participate in a “No Kings” national day of protest in New York on October 18, 2025.
(Photo by Timothy A.Clary/AFP via Getty Images)

Robert Freeman
Oct 19, 2025
Common Dreams


The rally was in Livermore, California, a burgh of about 85,000, 50 miles to the east of San Francisco. This is a small, exemplary sampling of the many hundreds of signs carried by the many thousands of protesters.

“Memo to the fascists: peaceful protest is not violent insurrection.”
RECOMMENDED...





‘We the People Will Rule!’: Millions Turn Out for ‘No Kings’ Protests Against Trump Tyranny

“ICE is Trump’s Gestapo.”

“When cruelty becomes normal, compassion becomes radical.”

“If you love America, this is how you show it.”

“No Dick-tators.”

“Super callous fragile racist lying nazi POTUS.”

“No faux-king way we’re gonna take this.”

“It’s bad enough that even introverts are here.”

“The reason you should care is not that it could happen to you, but that it’s already happening to others.”

“Hate never made a country great.”

“So many concerns; so little cardboard.”

“If I had a nickel for every time Trump lied, I wouldn’t need Social Security.”

“No kings. No felons. No pedophiles.”

“When tyranny becomes law, rebellion becomes duty.”

“No troops in our cities.”

“Only YOU can prevent fascist liars”

“If you’re doing what’s right, why do you need to wear masks?”

“Citizens, not subjects”

“In a democracy, the opposition is not ‘The enemy within’”

“I’d rather be a fierce patriot than a loyal subject.”

“Sorry, Trump; we are NOT intimidated.”

“Trump: Is Netanyahu blackmailing you? Release the Epstein files.”

“Orange lies matter.”

“The best way to protect our rights is to exercise them.”

“We are the King family and even we say ’No Kings.‘”

“Protest while you still can.”

“Freedom is not a state of mind. It’s an act.”

“If you love America, this is how you show it.”

“Trump: you can’t arrest all of us.”

“I will defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic.”

“Nobody paid me to be here. This is the ’Free’ part of ‘Freedom.”

“Ikea has better cabinets than Trump.”

“Democracy dies in silence.”

“USA; King-free since 1776.”

“Why does Trump release Santos but not the Epstein files?”

“Trump is the real outside agitator.”

“Liar. Con man. Pedophile.”

“Not antifa. Just anti-fascist.”

“I don’t bow, to Kings, or anybody.”

“Silence is complicity.”

“Hey, Kristi Noem: We’re not animals. Don’t treat us like your puppy.”

“OMG GOP WTF.”

“Stop pretending your racism is patriotism.”

“The manifesto of resistance is called ’The Constitution.‘”

“Freedom doesn’t wear a crown.”

“I believe Stormy Daniels.”

“Hope is stronger than fear.”

“I’m not taking civics lessons from a 34-time convicted felon.”

“Power of the people is stronger than the people in power.”

“In a time of pervasive lying, truth-telling becomes a revolutionary act.” ~George Orwell

Trump has learned how to neuter those centers of power that might challenge him: law firms, universities, media, etc. His press secretary has called Democrats, “terrorists” and “criminals,” a predicate for silencing or eliminating them. If we are going to save the country, it’s clear it’s going to have to be done by the millions of people like those who attended this rally. Get YOUR signs ready. It’s going to be a long march.

'No Kings' rallies in Germany, France, Spain

The protest in Berlin drew US citizens living in Germany who are distraught by the events in their home countryImage: Christian Mang/REUTERS

As protesters gather across the US, there are also rallies being held in major European cities such as Berlin, Paris and Madrid.

In Berlin, protesters gathered in the Pariser Platz square, which is not only home to the iconic Brandenburg Gate but also the US Embassy.


"Berlin Germany showed up today to join a protest against authoritarianism and raise their voices for democracy. Americans all over the world know that We the People hold the power," Democrats Abroad posted on its official X account.

"We the People" is a reference to the opening phrase of the Preamble to the US Constitution.
Several hundred Americans showed up for the rally in Paris
Image: Vincent Isore/IP3press/IMAGO

In Paris, demonstrators carried signs such as "Resist Tyranny," with the Statue of Liberty a frequent motif at the event.

The Statue of Liberty was gifted from France to the US in 1886 to celebrate American independence and the close ties between the two countries.
Anti-Trump protesters gathered at the Puerta del Sol in downtown MadridImage: Bernat Armangue/AP Photo/picture alliance

There was also a protest in the Spanish capital, Madrid, and other demonstrations were reported in cities such as Malaga.






Trump's henchmen revealed: mapping the powerful network that really rules America

Robert Reich
October 18, 2025 
RAW STORY


Stephen Miller looks on as Donald Trump hosts a cabinet meeting. REUTERS/Brian Snyder

A formal organization chart of the Trump regime would show Trump on top, his Cabinet officers arrayed underneath him, the White House staff below them, and an assortment of lower-level appointees at the bottom.

The reality is far different.

Today I want to give you what might be described as a power map of the regime — where power really lies and who really reports to whom.

At the top center of the map is the troika of Stephen Miller, Russell Vought, and JD Vance. Their joint goal appears to be to destroy American democracy.

Their power comes from their knowledge, tenacity, connections, and fanaticism — and from Trump’s apparent willingness to sign off on whatever they want to do.
Stephen Miller wants to return America to the 1950s, when it was dominated by white, straight, Christian men whose ancestors were born here. Miller is pushing for high tariffs, managing the ICE raids on Democrat-run cities, summoning National Guard and federal troops, and seeking to provoke enough violence to justify invocation of the Insurrection Act.

Russell Vought wants to create an all-powerful executive branch dictatorship, usurping the roles of the other branches. Vought has illegally impounded over $410 billion so far. During the shutdown, he has frozen nearly $28 billion for more than 200 projects mostly in Democrat-led cities and congressional districts, has fired thousands of federal employees, and is threatening not to provide back pay to furloughed federal employees.
JD Vance wants to prevent the Democrats from taking control of one or both chambers of Congress in the 2026 midterms and become president after Trump. He’s urging Republican states to engage in more gerrymandering to eke out more Republican House seats, managing the legal assault on the Voting Rights Act and mail-in voting, and pushing universities and the media to the right.

A fourth person also near the center of the regime’s power structure is Robert F. Kennedy Jr., whose tenacity and fanaticism are doing incomparable damage to America’s system of health care, health research, and public health. He’s got a lot of power but organizationally is out of the loop.

Second tier

Under Miller are Kristi Noem, secretary of homeland security; Howard Lutnick, secretary of commerce; and Pete Hegseth, secretary of defense (or war).


Under Vought are Scott Bessent, secretary of the treasury, and what remains of Musk’s DOGE.

Under Vance are Pam Bondi, attorney general; Kash Patel, director of the FBI; Linda McMahon, secretary of education; and Marco Rubio, secretary of state.

Under RFK Jr. is a vast (and increasingly dysfunctional) public health system including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institutes of Health.

Third tier

Beneath the second tier is a ragtag collection of ambitious bottom-feeders and misfits who are trying to rise through the muck.

For example: William Pulte, who, in his capacity as director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, has come up with flimsy evidence of mortgage fraud allegedly committed by people Trump wants to harm, such as New York State Attorney General Letitia James, California Senator Adam Schiff, and Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook. Pulte reports to Bondi and Miller.


There’s also Peter Navarro, the fanatical trade isolationist and anti-China hand who in the first Trump regime publicly advocated hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for COVID-19 and condemned public health measures that aimed to stop the virus’s spread. After refusing to tell Congress what he knew about Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election, Navarro was convicted of contempt of Congress and spent four months in prison. Navarro reports to Lutnick and Miller.

Tom Homan, the so-called “border czar,” who accepted a bag of $50,000 in an FBI sting operation (the investigation has been dropped by Trump’s Justice Department and the FBI).

Heather Honey, a well-known election denier, now heading the Office of Election Integrity.

Where’s Trump?

Depending on the day and the issue, Trump wafts around the power map.

Because he is not a decision-maker and is pursuing little other than power, money, and praise, no one actually reports to him. They listen to him rave, laud him, tell him how wonderful he is and that he’s right about everything, and then report to the people with real power.


Trump will be out in front on an issue that’s likely to get a lot of positive attention, generate him a lot of money, or enlarge his power. Otherwise, he’s off the map, watching television and playing golf.
The fringe

Around the fringe of the power map is a Star Wars cantina of weirdos. Although not officially inside the regime, they exercise power by gaining fleeting access to Trump or to one of the troika.

They include Laura Loomer, Curtis Yarvin, Steve Bannon, Roger Stone, Michael Flynn, Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity, and various other Fox News personalities whose phone calls Trump will take and who may influence his thinking for a moment but have only indirect influence on what the regime actually does.

The oligarchy

At the top of the power map you’ll see billionaire oligarchs who have extraordinary clout in the Trump regime. In effect, the regime reports to them.

They include:
Peter Thiel, the Silicon Valley entrepreneur who got JD Vance his job. He has a direct pipeline to Vance.
Stephen Schwarzman, the private equity CEO. Schwarzman takes a variety of roles. For example, he’s behind the scenes in the regime’s fight with Harvard and other major institutions.
Bill Ackman, the investor. He, too, influences the troika. He’s the main intermediary between Trump and Elon Musk.
Musk himself still wields significant influence over Miller, Vought, and Vance.
Marc Andreessen, the unofficial godfather of Silicon Valley and co-founder of venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz. He’s heavily invested in artificial intelligence startups and financial technology firms and informally advises the regime.

Also: tech oligarchs Jeff Bezos, Larry Ellison, Mark Zuckerberg, Larry Page, and Tim Cook.

And Donald Trump Jr., Eric Trump, and Jared Kushner. As members of the Trump family, they depend on, and are depended on by, the powers within the regime.
What’s in it for the oligarchs?

Money and power. Most basically, the oligarchs don’t trust democracy. Their definition of freedom is the ability to accumulate and retain as much wealth as they wish.

Their deepest fear is that the majority of Americans, if fully informed, would expropriate their fortunes. As Thiel wrote: “I no longer believe that freedom and democracy are compatible.”

Marc Andreessen’s red line was a proposal that wafted around the Biden administration to tax unrealized capital gains. Others are freaked out by the possibility of a wealth tax on billionaires and multimillionaires.

The oligarchs are not entirely anti-government because they also want government funding for their giant projects, such as AI and the exploration (and exploitation) of space, which require vast amounts of capital and resources.

Hence, their enthusiasm for the defense industry, Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds, and Chinese technology and the Chinese market.

***

No one in the Trump regime reports directly to these oligarchs. Instead, those with power inside the regime keep a keen eye on the oligarchs — courting them, seeking their approval, wanting their connections, using their power, pocketing their money, and channeling their influence.


The oligarchs know their decisions can make or break Trump. They likewise depend on the regime. Power in the Trump regime is a function of such mutual dependence.Robert Reich is a professor of public policy at Berkeley and former secretary of labor. His writings can be found at https://robertreich.substack.com/.

Robert Reich's new memoir, Coming Up Short, can be found wherever you buy books. You can also support local bookstores nationally by ordering the book at bookshop.org.
Brewing crisis: java-loving NY confronts soaring coffee costs


By AFP
October 17, 2025


Coffee-lovers are facing increasing pain as the cost of beans has jumped 21 percent between August 2024 and August 2025 in the United States - Copyright AFP/File ANGELA WEISS


Raphaëlle PELTIER

New Yorkers run on coffee. From high-end experimental boutique cafes to the humble sidewalk cart, millions of cups of java are sold every day.

But coffee-lovers are facing increasing pain as they pay for their simple espresso shots and elaborate pumpkin spiced lattes as the cost of beans has jumped 21 percent between August 2024 and August 2025 in the United States — the world’s largest market for coffee.

Climate shocks drove the cost of arabica soaring, with the beans hitting an all-time high in February 2025. That has been compounded by elevated transport costs and the 50 percent tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump since August 6 on many products from Brazil.

Brazil, the largest coffee producer, has been sanctioned by the Trump administration for its prosecution of former president Jair Bolsonaro for a coup attempt. It supplies 30 percent of the United States’s unroasted beans.

“It’s having a major impact on us, on small business owners, on farmers, across the board,” Jeremy Lyman, co-founder of the New York-based chain Birch Coffee, told AFP.

Founded in 2009, the brand has 14 outlets citywide, roasting its own specialty coffee in Queens since 2015.

“The price of coffee on the market has just been on a steady incline over the last probably year. I think it’s gone up about 55 percent from this time last year…it’s impacting the prices that we charge,” Lyman said.

He said that Brazil’s production had become “unaffordable” forcing Birch to look elsewhere for beans with its importer “pushing pause” on its orders unless specially requested.

Cecafe, the Council of Coffee Exporters of Brazil, reports that exports to the United States have dropped almost 53 percent as of September compared to the year before with importers looking instead to Mexico, Peru and Ethiopia.

– United by coffee –

Lyman acknowledges market forces have meant price hikes for his customers, with Birch adding 50 cents to cups sold in-store, and $2 to $3 per bag of roasted coffee sold online.

“Typically, it’ll be small, incremental (increases) because it also helps us get a little bit more time to navigate how we’re going to be sourcing,” he said, adding that he tried to give customers two weeks of warning.

Other cafes have adopted a novel approach: adding an adjustable premium to the base price of each cup according to what level Trump has set tariffs that day, Lyman said.

But customers will only swallow so much, the Birch founder warned, warning of a real risk of losing customers.

Jason Nickel, 45, said that while he still seeks out a daily caffeine hit, he is “a little more careful about where I go.”

He cannot imagine paying more than $6 a cup, including tip, for cortado — an espresso shot with a dash of milk foam.

Anna Simonovsky, 32, said that her upper limit had gone from $7 for a latte — a milkier, frothier drink than a cortado — to as much as $10. She enjoys coffee as a treat for special occasions, like a visit with a friend.

Trump recently threw a lifeline to the two-thirds of Americans who drink coffee daily when he placed coffee on a list of products not cultivated by US farmers in sufficient quantity — potentially exempting it from tariffs, alongside tea and cocoa.

And in a rare glimmer of bipartisanship, coffee-loving Republicans and Democrats are jointly sponsoring a bill intended to protect coffee products.
Safety for hire: security firms cash in on World Cup in Mexico

By AFP
October 16, 2025


Leopoldo Cerdeira's luxury cars recently transported a FIFA delegation visiting Mexico - Copyright AFP STRINGER


Alexander MARTINEZ

Gunshots rang out in a Mexico City warehouse as Leopoldo Cerdeira emptied a cartridge into a car door propped up on a stand.

The reason for the smoky handgun and scattering of bullet casings littered over the floor was that Cerdeira wanted to demonstrate the quality of his vehicles’ armour plating in order to rent them out to wealthy foreign visitors coming to Mexico for the 2026 World Cup.

The head of security firm Ruhe proudly displayed how the bullets had been blocked by the solid synthetic layer that coats the entirety of his fleet of 70 vehicles.

This Mexican entrepreneur is ready for the World Cup, which his nation will co-host with the United States and Canada from June 11 to July 19 next year.

“Our bookings are for tourists, people who have money, who come to see the matches but are afraid because they have heard bad things about Mexico,” said Cerdeira at his company’s headquarters.

Cerdeira’s luxury cars recently transported a FIFA delegation visiting Mexico, and the fleet, reserved for the Mexican Formula 1 Grand Prix at the end of the month, will increase to 80 vehicles for the global footballing showpiece.

But there is far more to the Mexican security industry than what are essentially personal, luxury armoured vehicles.

Drivers, armed escorts, bomb protection, bulletproof vests and armoured briefcases are just some of the other products offered by a sector that profits from the criminal violence that plagues Mexico — a country with some 30,000 murders per year.

Much of this bloodshed is linked to Mexico’s infamous drug cartels.

“The country’s insecurity has led to the growth of our industry,” said Gabriel Hernandez, head of Armoring Group, which sells bulletproof cars and clothing for civilians and military personnel in Mexico, Spain and the United States.

Next year’s World Cup will see three Mexican cities host matches, with millions expected to flock to Mexico City, northern industrial city Monterrey and the booming home of tequila and Mariachi music, Guadalajara.

The opening match will be held in Mexico City, where 40,000 additional CCTV cameras have been installed, and the use of drones will be restricted in the three cities.

Local authorities say they are doing their utmost to ensure security for the World Cup, and while the capital — the site of Pele’s Brazil lifting their third world title in 1970 and Diego Maradona’s Argentina their second in 1986 — is usually spared from attacks by drug traffickers, the same cannot be said of the other host cities.



– ‘World Cup truce’ –



Guadalajara is the centre of operations for the Jalisco Nueva Generacion Cartel (CJNG), a group designated as terrorists by the United States, which has promised a reward of $12 million for the arrest of its leader, Nemesio Oseguera, known as ‘El Mencho’.

To reassure clients beyond armour plating, there are car handles that can deliver electric shocks, wheels that can release a dose of pepper spray and tyres that can last for 80 kilometres (50 miles) after being punctured.

The daily price to hire one of Cerdeira’s cars ranges from $800 to $1,100, plus an additional $500 for a driver and escort. For $1,500, customers can also purchase a discreet bulletproof vest.

However, such companies do not hold a monopoly on the Mexican private security industry.

The cartels have set up their own parallel sector, manufacturing ‘monsters’ — huge vehicles with homemade armour plating.

Groups such as the CJNG have released videos showing their ‘sicarios’ (hitmen) parading around in these vehicles while armed to the teeth.

At the beginning of the year, authorities dismantled a clandestine armouring workshop in the state of Sinaloa, in the north-west of the country — the stronghold of another of Mexico’s major cartels.

The security industry has the additional concern of seeing its workforce fall into the hands of the cartels — a challenge entrepreneurs claim to be tackling.

Eight years ago, two workers employed by Cerdeira were recruited by a criminal group.

According to the entrepreneur, these groups offer salaries three times higher, but the risk is enormous: his two former employees were found dead in the state of Sinaloa.

However, despite their dangerous nature, the cartels do not pose a direct threat to the World Cup, according to David Saucedo, a security consultant who works for embassies and local authorities.

“They themselves have a social base that will benefit from the matches,” he explained.

Saucedo even refused to rule out a possible tacit agreement between the cartels and the authorities, who would commit to not conducting large-scale operations against the cartels in exchange for assurances that the latter will not carry out “bloody acts that would tarnish Mexico’s image”.

“It would be a kind of World Cup truce,” added Saucedo.
‘Less and less sea ice’: Brazil woman sails solo through Arctic


By AFP
October 16, 2025


Brazilian sailor Tamara Klink poses on her sailboat 'Sardinha 2' as she completed her trip through the Northwest Passage - Copyright AFP STRINGER


Ivan PISARENKO, with Esteban ROJAS in Sao Paulo

Brazilian navigator Tamara Klink told AFP she encountered “very little” sea ice on her solo sail through the Northwest Passage — a rare feat that would have been impossible without an icebreaker ship three decades ago.

In September, the 28-year-old became the second woman and the first Latin American to complete the perilous Arctic journey from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean, which has only become possible due to melting ice caused by climate change.

“I only found ice on nine percent of the way which is very little,” Klink told AFP after returning from the 6,500-kilometer (4,000-mile) voyage between Greenland and Alaska.

“By talking to scientists, by talking to local people, especially hunters, Inuit hunters and Inuit fishermen, I understand that this very little amount of ice that I found is part of a general trend of having less and less sea ice every year.”

According to the United Nations, global temperatures in 2024 were the hottest on record, surpassing 1.5C above pre-industrial levels for the first time.

“This is part of a trend that will be very difficult to reverse if we don’t act with bold decisions, if we don’t make courageous choices in this decade,” she said, referring to the climate crisis.

Next month, Brazil will host the 30th edition of annual UN global climate talks which began at a time when the majority of ships needed icebreaker assistance or specialized hulls to navigate the Northwest Passage.

“With global warming, now the sea ice is melting during summertime… so smaller boats are able to pass and smaller crew are able to do this long trip,” said Klink.

Tamara is the daughter of celebrated Brazilian explorer Amyr Klink, the first and only person to row solo across the South Atlantic Ocean.



– ‘The sea doesn’t care if I am female’ –



Klink said her father’s long absences while at sea first drew her to the water.

“I was 12 years old when I asked my father to help me to start sailing alone and my father said that if I wanted to do that, he would help me with zero boats, with zero advice,” she said.

“My father had all the answers and he had all the tools, but by telling me he would not help me, he gave me the right to make mistakes and to learn how to be who I became.”

Klink’s first solo sailing adventure took her from Norway to Brazil in 2021 in a tiny boat she bought “for the price of a bicycle.”

She then spent eight months of winter in Greenland, her boat stuck in the ice, between 2023 and 2024.

In July, she began the two-month journey through the Northwest Passage.

Klink is only the 14th person to make the solo voyage, according to her team.

“When I’m at sea, in my boat, I know that my gender does not matter. The sea doesn’t care if I’m female or male, if I’m old or young, if I’m strong or weak, if I’m there or if I’m not there anymore.”
In Argentine farm town, Milei mania fizzles


By AFP
October 17, 2025


The farming town of San Andres de Giles in Buenos Aires province, voted for Javier Milei in 2023 but that enthusiasm has faded - Copyright AFP JUAN MABROMATA
Leila MACOR

For clues as to why Argentina’s President Javier Milei faces a potential drubbing in next week’s mid-terms, look no further than San Andres de Giles, a farming town set amid wheat fields two hours from Buenos Aires.

The town known simply as Giles backed Milei for president in October 2023, when the 54-year-old economist and punk rocker swept to power as an outsider with a radical plan to fix Argentina’s broken economy.

Milei won 58 percent of the vote in Giles, higher than his national average of 55.65 percent.

But the fervor he elicited there has since largely fizzled, an ominous sign for US President Donald Trump’s closest South American ally, whose reform agenda hangs in the balance.

As she rearranges books in the town’s brightly lit library, Jacqueline Garrahan says she feels betrayed by a president she believed would embody change.

Garrahan is a retired teacher but works at the library to supplement her pension of $600 a month in order to support her student daughter.

In 2023, she voted for Milei as the candidate most likely to oust the centre-left Peronist movement, which has dominated Argentine politics for most of the post-war period but been dogged by accusations of corruption.

“I thought he would put an end to corruption, and today I feel completely disappointed,” she said, alluding to the Karina Milei scandal.

“A lot of people say the same thing: ‘Now what do we do? Who do we vote for?”



– ‘Aggressive’ style –



The past few weeks have been bruising for Milei.

A year ago, he was being cheered by the global right for dramatically reducing inflation and erasing a 14-year budget deficit by force of severe austerity programs.

But in the past month, Milei has had to be bailed out twice by the Trump administration to try to halt a run on the national currency, the peso, triggered by his party’s trouncing by the center-left in the Buenos Aires provincial polls last month.

A corruption scandal involving his sister and right-hand woman, Karina Milei, and revelations that one of his top candidates in the midterms received payments from a suspected drug trafficker have further taken the shine off Milei’s presidency.

In September, voters in Giles punished him by backing the Peronist party in elections to the Buenos Aires provincial legislature.

For Garrahan, who still defines herself as anti-Peronist, Milei’s cardinal sin was to refuse to adjust the budgets of the country’s cherished public universities to reflect high inflation.

She and many other voters have also been turned off by his inflammatory rhetoric targeting journalists, whom he says “we don’t hate enough,” and “degenerate prosecutors,” among others.

“He’s violent, aggressive,” she said.

– ‘We can’t plan ahead’ –



Milei, whose party is in a minority in parliament, needs to pick up a big chunk of seats in both houses of parliament on October 26 to be able to pass legislation and reassure markets about the future of his reforms.

But “with a depressed economy, corruption scandals, and considerable uncertainty about how things will be managed from October onward, it’s very likely that Milei will be much less seductive,” Gabriel Vommaro, a sociologist at the National University of San Martin, told AFP.

The political uncertainty is weighing on grain producers in South America’s breadbasket.

Aldana Guanzini, 37, a producer of soybeans, corn, and wheat in Giles, who exports 80 percent of her harvest, was delighted when Milei eliminated export taxes in September, in order to boost sales and bring in much-needed dollars.

The relief was short-lived, however: three days later, after the government had reached its dollar target, the taxes were reinstated.

For Guanzini, who like many farmers backed Milei in 2023, the flip-flopping has been excruciating.

“We are living complete uncertainty. We can’t plan ahead,” she complained.

New deal puts Takaichi on track to be Japan’s first woman PM: reports


By AFP
October 19, 2025


Sanae Takaichi looks on track to become Japan's first woman prime minister with her LDP set to sign a new coaltion deal, reports say - Copyright POOL/AFP/File Yuichi YAMAZAKI

Japan’s ruling party is set to sign a new coalition deal on Monday, paving the way for Sanae Takaichi to become the country’s first woman prime minister, media reports said.

Takaichi became leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) earlier this month, but her bid to become premier was derailed by the collapse of her ruling coalition.

Since then, the LDP has been working to cobble together a different alliance, putting her chances back on track.

Takaichi and her counterpart Hirofumi Yoshimura from the reformist, right-leaning opposition Japan Innovation Party (JIP) are set to sign a coalition agreement on Monday, Kyodo News reported Sunday, citing unnamed senior officials from both parties.

The Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper also said Takaichi and Yoshimura were “likely to sign a coalition agreement after talks on Monday”, citing unnamed party sources.

The reports come after the LDP’s junior partner, the Komeito party, left the ruling coalition after 26 years, plunging Japan into a political crisis.

The fragmented opposition appears to have failed to agree a common joint candidate for premier.

An alliance between LDP and JIP could lead to Takaichi’s election as premier on Tuesday, but they are still two seats shy of a majority in the powerful lower house of the two-chamber parliament.

Should the vote go to a second-round runoff, however, Takaichi would only need support from more MPs than the other candidate.

All the political wrangling comes just days before the expected arrival of US President Donald Trump at the end of this month.

Trump will travel to Japan before the annual Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in South Korea.

Senior officials from the two parties agreed Friday in Tokyo that the LDP would strive to realise the JIP’s proposals to lower the consumption tax rate on food to zero from the current level of up to 10 percent, and to abolish corporate and organisational donations, Kyodo News reported.

The LDP also accepted Yoshimura’s demand to cut the number of parliament seats, which he has called a “non-negotiable condition” for entering the coalition, it said.

If Takaichi becomes the new prime minister, the JIP will not hold a ministerial post but one of her special advisors will be chosen from the party, TV Asahi said.

However, the Yomiuri reported Yoshimura would make a final decision on whether to join the Takaichi cabinet taking a ministerial post or just to cooperate from outside the cabinet.

Officials of the LDP and the JIP could not be immediately reached to comment on the reports to AFP.


Taiwan’s KMT elects new leader

Cheng Li-wun, the only female contender among six candidates, defeated former Taipei mayor Hau Lung

Taiwan’s KMT elects new leader
Former KMT Chairman Eric Chu congratulating incoming leader Cheng Li-wun / Cultural Communication Committee of the KMT
By bno - Taipei Office October 19, 2025

Cheng Li-wun, the only female contender among six candidates, defeated former Taipei mayor Hau Lung‑bin by a wide margin, winning over 50% of the ballot, in the leadership race for Taiwan’s opposition Kuomintang on October 18 according to a statement from KMT headquarters on Saturday evening.

Cheng is now due to assume office on November 1.

During her campaign Cheng adopted a reform-minded stance and told supporters that she aimed to turn the KMT from a “flock of sheep” into “lions” The Straits Times reports.

For many, however, the campaign was overshadowed by serious claims of interference in the party’s internal election. One prominent KMT figure and media personality, Jaw Shaw‑kong, alleged that online disinformation operations had boosted pro-Cheng sentiment, citing domestic reports of more than 1,000 TikTok videos and 23 YouTube accounts posting related content, with more than half said to be based outside Taiwan.

When asked about the role of Beijing in the matter though, the head of Taiwan’s National Security Bureau, Tsai Ming‑yen did not confirm the origins of the monitoring of the campaigns on these platforms. Key for many in Taiwan was Tsai also opting not to publicly attribute responsibility to the Chinese government.

As a result, Cheng rejected the interference claims by Jaw and others as “very cheap labels”, admonishing politicians to restore rationality in domestic politics – an issue many on the island of around 24mn routinely point to as absent in recent years.

As the new head of the KMT, Cheng inherits the leadership of a party that has lost three consecutive presidential elections to the left-wing Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and is seeking to revitalise its base ahead of the 2028 presidential contest, AP adds.

In Taiwan however, the KMT retains significant legislative influence and, under Cheng, is expected to emphasise pragmatism and cross-strait stability – an aspect of policy already being held up by DPP supporting media as evidence of her leanings towards China. But despite Cheng’s claims of being a reformer, her own relatively sudden rise raises questions about how the party will balance closer ties with China against a public in Taiwan increasingly wary of Beijing’s influence.

In the short-term, as has been reported by The Straits Times, Cheng’s stance on increasing defence spending proposed under President Lai Ching‑te is likely to set the tone for upcoming policy debates – the 55-year-old opposing DPP moves to curry favour with US President Donald Trump by raising Taiwan's current defence budget to 5% of the nation’s GDP.

More broadly, her leadership could signal a shift in KMT strategy - from long-term opposition to a party preparing for a return to power.