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Yuma Residents Rally Against Trump, ICE, and Military Action in Iran

Yuma County took to the streets Saturday, rallying against Trump, ICE, and U.S. military strikes in Iran under the "No Kings" banner.

Sarah Chen1 min read
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Yuma Residents Rally Against Trump, ICE, and Military Action in Iran
Source: npr.brightspotcdn.com

Yuma County residents gathered Saturday for a "No Kings" rally targeting President Donald Trump, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and recent American military action in Iran, turning three overlapping federal controversies into a single afternoon of public dissent in one of Arizona's most border-sensitive communities.

The March 28 demonstration drew speakers, community coalition groups, and local activists whose signs conveyed the twin pressures Yuma has long navigated: immigration enforcement that directly affects border-adjacent families and foreign policy decisions that land close to home in a county with one of Arizona's largest veteran populations.

The No Kings movement has organized similar rallies nationally and across California and Arizona, typically uniting immigration advocates, anti-war groups, and opponents of the current administration under a shared name. Saturday's Yuma event carried its own local weight. ICE operations along the U.S.-Mexico border are not an abstraction for many Yuma County residents; they shape daily life for immigrant families, the businesses that serve them, and the broader community built around cross-border commerce and culture.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

KAWC documented the rally through a photo-centered gallery published March 30, capturing turnout, speakers, and the hand-lettered signage that spelled out the gathering's three core objections: opposition to Trump's leadership, criticism of ICE enforcement tactics, and protest against U.S. military engagement in the Middle East.

For some who attended, the march was an act of solidarity with immigrant neighbors directly in the path of federal enforcement operations. For others, it represented a broader stand against executive authority and military decisions made without wider public deliberation. In Yuma, where the consequences of both immigration policy and military deployment are felt acutely, that distinction matters less than the shared impulse to show up.

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