Sponsored link
Sunday, May 17, 2026

Sponsored link

News + PoliticsProtestMassive No Kings protest in SF—and all over the country. Where was...

Massive No Kings protest in SF—and all over the country. Where was Lurie?

Lots of talk about the billionaire class. The city's billionaire mayor was nowhere in sight

-

It’s hard to count people when a demonstration fills Market Street, from the Ferry Building all the way to Civic Center, but I think it’s safe to say more than 50,000 took the streets in San Francisco for the No Kings rally.

Similar rallies took place all over the country, with millions standing up to the Trump Administration’s policies.

That kind of says it all

From the UK Guardian:

Chicago’s mayor, Brandon Johnson, told the crowd the Trump administration had “decided that they want a rematch of the civil war”, which the white supremacist Confederacy lost to the Union in the 19th century.

“We are here to stand firm and stand committed that we will not bend, we will not bow, we will not cower, we will not submit,” Johnson said. “We do not want troops in our city.”

Rep. Nancy Pelosi was at the march.

An offer that’s hard to refuse

From Mayor Daniel Lurie’s daily media schedule:

On Saturday, October 18, 2025 and Sunday, October 19, 2025 Mayor Daniel Lurie will hold internal meetings.

The mayor of Chicago is openly, aggressively, opposing Trump. The mayor of San Francisco is holding “internal meetings.”

Lots of great costumes

I saw a lot of signs supporting a lot of causes, but there was definitely a trend toward blaming the billionaire class for many of the nation’s problems. Meghann Adams, a school bus driver and union leader who addressed the crowd just before the march started, talked about “where our money is going” (to the very rich) and “why we have so little.”

She said, “we can build California for the workers, not the billionaires.”

This at a time when new figures show the richest 400 Americans are with more than $6.6 trillion, and have gained $1.2 trillion in wealth in just the past year. The lowest 50 percent of the country—170 million people—has a total net worth about $4 trillion.

The level of obscenity in those figures boggles the mind.

48 Hills welcomes comments in the form of letters to the editor, which you can submit here. We also invite you to join the conversation on our FacebookTwitter, and Instagram

Tim Redmond
Tim Redmond
Tim Redmond has been a political and investigative reporter in San Francisco for more than 30 years. He spent much of that time as executive editor of the Bay Guardian. He is the founder of 48hills.
Sponsored link
Sponsored link

Featured

Inside San Quentin, a new approach to rehabilitation and training

The Last Mile helps teach residents skills that will get them jobs on the outside. It's inspiring—but it's still a prison with too many people behind bars

Broad coalition urges No on B vote

Advocates say it's a solution in search of a problem.

Like her mother, sculptor Maryam Yousif is inspired by a Mesopotamian warrior queen

Iraqi artist's multitudinous clay explorations are powered by ancient myths, Arabian pop art, anonymous bloggers.

More by this author

Inside San Quentin, a new approach to rehabilitation and training

The Last Mile helps teach residents skills that will get them jobs on the outside. It's inspiring—but it's still a prison with too many people behind bars

A right-wing group comes to SF—and city officials are happy to be part of it

When we start welcoming the role of anti-labor billionaires and their national allies in local politics, it's a disturbing trend.

San Francisco could tax the rich—locally—and avoid brutal cuts to city services. Here’s how

Plus: Will the supes call for public power, now? Why are we bailing out the privatized zoo? That's The Agenda for May 10-17
Sponsored link

You might also likeRELATED