OCTOBER 11–OCTOBER 17, 2025

THIS WEEK IN…

PEOPLE POWER


The Women’s March on Washington, held one day after Donald Trump was inaugurated for his first term in 2017, left many participants uplifted, instilled with a sense of community, and encouraged to continue their engagement in a wide range of political and civil issues. The day saw hundreds of sister marches all over the country, drawing some 4 million participants.  

Pink knitted hat with abstract cat ears
Pink “pussy hat” worn by Judy Bazis on January 21, 2021. Ntl. Museum of American History Collection


In June of this year, around 5 million Americans took to the streets in more than 2,000 locations to protest the Trump administration’s authoritarian policies.


Two of the largest demonstrations in the history of the United States happened during Trump’s presidency.  Their numbers will likely be eclipsed by the second No Kings rallies on October 18. The Cavalry is Coming, predicts NATASHA KORECKI.  


“ ‘The anger level is way higher’ than it was for June protests, which will drive turnout,” says Public Citizen co-president Lisa Gilbert in an interview with SARAH D. WIRE for the USA Today article, ‘No Kings’ protests could draw historic turnout in pushback against Trump”.

No Kings Day events nationwide on October 18, 2025

History has shown that civil resistance works when a movement is large and relentless. In his article, America needs a mass movement – now for The Atlantic, DAVID BROOKS explores successful protest movements and argues that “without one, America may sink into autocracy for decades.”


The reaction from the White House, Republican leaders and other Republican politicians to upcoming mass protests has been to label the No Kings rallies as “hate America” events, and to dismiss the demonstrators as “the rabid base” of the Democratic Party.  ‘No Kings’ has Republicans in Disarray comments JOE PERTICONE for The Bulwark, exploring “why GOP lawmakers are spreading fear about the upcoming rally”. 


As much as the critics of the No Kings rallies want to paint a picture of radicals and dangerous leftists, the people participating in Saturday’s rallies come from all walks of life: Doctor. Teacher. Mamaw. Meet some ‘No Kings’ protesters organizing in ‘deep-red’ Kentucky, as introduced by Kentucky Lantern reporters JAMIE LUCKE and LIAM NIEMEYER.

Protestors with signs in city street
Thousands gather in Lexington, Kentucky, for ‘No Kings” protest. Kentucky Local News WKYT


Millions of people protesting in all 50 states will send a powerful message against the argument that the Trump administration’s policies rest on a strong public mandate. 
ROBERT REICH argues in his opinion piece for Raw Story, that “Trump’s power depends on maintaining the illusion that he’s all-powerful, and that most Americans (apart from those he and his lapdogs label “pro-Hamas,” “terrorists,” and “antifa”) adore him.”

No Kings event poster for October 18, 2025. Source: Indivisible

…IN OTHER NEWS

Donald Trump has long had an odd fixation with the death penalty, dating back decades to 1989, when he demanded the execution of five young Black and Latino men wrongfully convicted of raping a woman in Central Park. During his first term, he ended a 17-year federal moratorium and oversaw 13 executions, the most in a single year in over a century. He pushed to expand capital punishment to crimes like drug trafficking and killing police officers, and authorized alternative execution methods such as firing squads, electrocution, and poison gas. At one point, he even mused about alternative methods like hangings and beheadings. On his first day back in office for his second term, he vowed to pick up where he left off and to pursue more executions.

room with green walls, mirror window and gurney with straps in foreground
Execution chamber with gurney Source: The Innocent Project

His stance is now influencing a wave of state legislation aimed at expanding the death penalty. Surina Venkat examines how Trump’s death penalty push gains traction in statehouses

States have executed 30 people this year, already the highest annual total in more than a decade. Maurice Chammah analyzes What’s Behind the Execution Surge of 2025

Joe Biden halted federal executions and just before leaving office, commuted the death sentences of 37 death row inmates. Unable to kill them, Donald Trump has found a way to still make them suffer as much as possible, as Jess Bravin reports: Biden Spared 37 Killers From Execution. Trump Ordered Up a Lifetime of Torment.

September 27–October 3, 2025

THIS WEEK IN…

GUTTING GOVERNMENT PROGRAMS


Eight months into the second Trump administration, the federal government’s ability to serve the public has been steadily hollowed out despite many aspects of daily life seemingly continuing as usual. Through sweeping budget cuts and mass layoffs, the erosion of the administrative state has started to impact the delivery and scope of services relied on by millions of Americans. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) operates with reduced readiness, national parks face staffing shortages, people lose their healthcare and food assistance benefits run out.


Michael Sainato looks at how food banks all over the country brace for the impact of the largest cuts to the government’s food assistance program for low-income people in US history Leah Douglas and Nathan Frandino examine what essential programs States are forced to cut. In addition, rising food prices due to recently imposed tariffs are making life harder for everyone from teachers to gig workers and small business owners.

Illustration of an office with a giant DOGE cap wearing figure attacking through the windows
Illustration for WIRED by YONK


Significant budget and staffing cuts to FEMA have led to the cancellation or reduction of several services. Scott Petersen and Tarini Parti report from St. Louis, where residents are still waiting for help from FEMA after a tornado struck the city back in the spring: FEMA Is Paralyzed. Disaster-Torn Communities Are Paying the Price. Jennifer Berry Hawes and Ren Larson report on how lower-income residents who lost their homes during Hurricane Helene are struggling to receive help: Arduous and Unequal: The Fight to Get FEMA Housing Assistance After Helene.


Due to cuts in federal health spending by hundreds of billions of dollars, Rural health clinics are closing as David Wright and Eva McKend write. One California county is losing its only hospital. Ana B. Ibarra examines the impact on the residents who are being left without local emergency care. 


More than 24 million Americans receive subsidized health insurance and will see their premiums jump by the end of the year unless Republicans agree to a deal proposed by the Democrats. Couples are even considering divorce to keep their insurance premiums somewhat affordable, reports Sarah D. Wire in her article These people have found their health care at the center of a shutdown showdown. “Small business owners, self-employed people and early retirees are among the 4 million Americans who could lose the tax credit – and maybe their health insurance.”


The National Park system is struggling to keep the gigantic land areas clean, protected and its visitors safe.  With more than 25% of the workforce gone, essential climate, wildlife and ecology research can no longer be conducted and that “the real crisis is happening behind the scenes”. Kylie Mohr argues that Trump is setting the National Parks up to fail,in her story for The Atlantic.

Some 300,000 federal workers have lost or left their jobs, one in eight employees. WIRED “spoke with more than 200 federal workers in dozens of agencies to learn what happened as the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) tore through their offices.”  The Story of DOGE is a distressing investigation into how the callous and indiscriminate job cuts affected people in dozens of agencies.

DOGE was only the beginning, as the Project 2025 tracker shows, many of the objectives have not yet been achieved.

…IN OTHER NEWS


On Tuesday, Ronald Reagan–appointed U.S. District Judge William Young ruled that the Trump administration unlawfully targeted students for their pro-Palestinian activism. In a blistering opinion, unusual in its style and substance, he calls out the administration’s “full-throated assault on the First Amendment” and discusses the state of the country. “It’s a sign of the times that a federal judge would write an opinion like this,” Steve Vladeck, Supreme Court analyst and Georgetown Law professor. “Judge Young is committing to writing what so many of us are thinking.” Judge Young also writes: “ICE goes masked for a single reason — to terrorize Americans into quiescence… To us, masks are associated with cowardly desperados and the despised Ku Klux Klan. In all our history we have never tolerated an armed, masked secret police.”


Meanwhile, ICE agents have become even more violent, using excessive force and no longer targeting only minorities. At Federal Plaza immigration court in New York City, a reporter was assaulted and another journalist seriously injured, report Robert Pozarycki and Adam Daly.


Journalist Raven Geary was shot in the face with a pepper ball by federal officers while reporting on protests outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in the Chicago suburb of Broadview, Illinois where Federal ICE Agents even tear gassed local police and first responders