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Hundreds Rally in Coeur d'Alene as No Kings Protests Reach North Idaho

Hundreds filled the corner of U.S. 95 and Appleway for two hours Saturday, linking Coeur d'Alene to a nationwide 'No Kings' day that also reached Sandpoint and the Silver Valley.

Lisa Park1 min read
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Hundreds Rally in Coeur d'Alene as No Kings Protests Reach North Idaho
Source: cdapress.com
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Scott Miller, a Coeur d'Alene resident who joined the crowd at U.S. 95 and West Appleway Avenue on Saturday, voiced a sentiment that cut to the core of the two-hour demonstration: people are "all for" making the country better, he said, but object to "the approach."

Hundreds gathered at that intersection from 12:30 to 2:30 p.m. as North Idaho joined the national "No Kings" protest movement. Organized by local chapters of Indivisible and allied civic groups, the event drew a mix of longtime activists and first-time demonstrators who lined the corner with handmade signs, flags and costumes.

The U.S. 95 and Appleway intersection sits at one of Coeur d'Alene's busiest commercial corridors, giving the afternoon crowd maximum visibility along a stretch that sees heavy weekend traffic. Local law enforcement monitored the gathering throughout and reported no major incidents. Organizers reinforced a consistent message of nonviolence and civic engagement from the start.

The Coeur d'Alene demonstration was part of a coordinated regional effort that also brought protesters to Sandpoint and the Silver Valley on the same day. Organizers used Mobilize and Indivisible networks to coordinate messaging and publicize each location, linking North Idaho's events to a national day of action that drew major turnouts in state capitals and metropolitan areas.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The No Kings demonstrations were framed around concerns over executive overreach and specific policy grievances directed at the Trump administration. Coeur d'Alene's turnout fell well short of the crowds that filled city centers elsewhere, but hundreds showing up at a single intersection in Kootenai County reflects how far grassroots organizing networks have now extended into the Inland Northwest.

Kootenai County has long hosted both conservative and progressive civic activity, and Saturday's demonstration at one of its most-traveled corners added another visible data point to that civic record.

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