protests, Summit and No Kings
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Minnesota, No Kings
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Minnesota organizers canceled "No Kings" protests after two state lawmakers were shot. Gov. Tim Walz called it a "politically motivated assassination."
Rachel Scott, former DNC Chair Donna Brazile, Sarah Isgur, and Nancy Youssef join Martha Raddatz for ABC's "This Week" roundtable.
BLAINE, Minnesota (Reuters) -From the pulpit on Sunday, Father Joe Whalen exhorted his parishioners to avoid the kind of extreme partisanship and hate that appeared to be behind the killing of one of the church's own,
Minnesota state Speaker Emerita Melissa Hortman (D) and her husband were assassinated at their home on Saturday, and lawmakers from across the aisle have condemned the act of political
Authorities have identified 57-year-old Vance Luther Boelter as the suspect sought in connection with the early-morning shootings that left one Minnesota lawmaker and her husband dead, and another lawmaker and his wife seriously injured.
The “No Kings Day” protests will happen at the same time as a parade in Washington initiated by Trump honoring the U.S. Army.
Thousands gathered in Daley Plaza and in suburban events in protests timed to coincide with a military parade in Washington celebrating the Army's 250th anniversary and President Donald Trump's 79th birthday.
Protesters held signs that read, “No kings since 1776,” “Bad Things Happen When Good People Do Nothing,” “Stop the Parade Fund Medicaid,” “When cruelty becomes normal compassion looks radical” and “Make Orwell Fiction Again.”