Crowd packs Poultry Park to protest Trump administration

Around 1,000 protestors gathered Saturday morning in Gainesville’s Poultry Park for a “No Kings” protest. It was one of dozens held around the state—more than 1,800 nationwide—protesting the policies of the Trump administration.

Attendees milled inside the park and lined up behind barricades along Jesse Jewell Parkway, shouting various slogans calling for an end to what they consider to be President Trump’s “authoritarian” ways.

‘Indivisible,’ a grassroots movement with a mission to “elect progressive leaders,” was the organizing body behind the protest. Leaders of the Hall branch of the group previously said that 150 to 200 people registered for the event.

Event organizer Dallas Thompson, wearing an inflatable chicken costume, was delighted at the number of people who showed up for the protest. “I want to cry seeing so many people standing up for goodness and decency,” she said.

Thompson said she was expecting to see the person behind the Facebook account posting threatening comments to Indivisible Hall’s social media, but she had not seen the person or any other counter-protesters.

“Some lady did stop me and ask, ‘Are you pro-immigration or anti-immigration?’ and I said ‘pro’ and she drove off,” she said.

Another one of the attendees, Diana, who did not wish to reveal her last name, said she is a first-generation American who grew up in Gainesville. She came to the protest to “speak up for her parents.”

“Everyone is in danger, no matter your skin color,” she said. “It’s a scary time we’re living in.”

Nick Alex, a Democrat running for Georgia’s 9th District seat of the House of Representatives in 2026, came to the protest to campaign against Republican incumbent Andrew Clyde.

When asked about his stance on the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” proposed by the Trump administration, Alex said his main disagreement was the bill’s plan to cut funds from the Medicaid and Medicare programs.

Alex said that around 60% of all births are funded by Medicaid. “Once healthcare is cut for these people, their gonna go to hospitals or emergency rooms where they won’t get the right kind of care,” he said.

Alex also plans to advocate against the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), specifically cuts to the Department of Veterans Affairs.

“In the VA, they’re cutting 85,000 jobs, 80% of which were held by veterans, so now you’ve got 65,000 veterans who are about to be unemployed,” he said. “They’re gonna be closing the regional offices of the VA, making it harder for them to get the care they deserve.”

Saturday’s protest also coincided with Trump’s birthday, the 250th anniversary parade of the U.S. Army, and Flag Day.

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