Government

Hundreds Rally in Newburgh for No Kings March Against Authoritarianism

Hundreds filled Colden Street along the Hudson River Saturday as Newburgh joined Poughkeepsie, Beacon and four other Hudson Valley cities in a coordinated No Kings protest.

James Thompson1 min read
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Hundreds Rally in Newburgh for No Kings March Against Authoritarianism
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Hundreds of Newburgh residents and Mid-Hudson Valley activists packed Colden Street above the Hudson River on Saturday, joining a nationally coordinated wave of No Kings demonstrations that simultaneously drew crowds in Poughkeepsie, Beacon, Cornwall, New Paltz and Gardiner.

The March 28 rally, organized as a nonviolent civic action, targeted what organizers described as threats to democratic norms and authoritarian tendencies at the federal level. Speakers addressed the crowd from the riverfront backdrop as marchers carried signs and flags representing a broad cross-section of the community rather than a single-issue constituency.

The six-city regional footprint in a single afternoon signals a level of organizational coordination that goes beyond spontaneous protest. Local groups in Newburgh plugged into the national No Kings movement while pointing to federal policies they say carry direct consequences for Orange County communities. No arrests or citations were reported, and the march proceeded without major incidents.

Newburgh's turnout fits a sustained pattern of political activism across the Hudson Valley that has built since mid-2025. The Colden Street demonstration drew attention in part because of its visibility: the riverfront site gave speakers a prominent public stage and provided a backdrop that amplified the event's reach through photo coverage showing flags and handmade signs spanning multiple causes.

Organizers nationwide have signaled additional actions in coming months. Locally, activists are expected to press that momentum into town halls, letters to elected officials and voter-engagement campaigns, raising the prospect of council-level responses in Newburgh before the next election cycle. Saturday's turnout gives that push a concrete number to point to.

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