3.5% Rule’: The Anti-Trump Movement Is Nearing an Important Threshold

MSNBC by The Rachel Maddow

An excerpt from The Rachel Maddow Show highlights how the recent No Kings rallies signal a new stage of organized, nonviolent resistance. Seven million people took part nationwide — one of the largest single-day protest turnouts in U.S. history — as thousands of local events replaced the old model of single-city marches. Drawing on new research from Harvard’s Kennedy School, Maddow connects this decentralized momentum to political scientist Erica Chenoweth’s “3.5 percent rule,” which shows that when roughly 3.5 percent of a population engages in sustained, peaceful protest, movements almost always prevail. With participation expanding into traditionally pro-Trump counties, the data suggest that the U.S. is edging closer to that historic threshold where disciplined, nonviolent action can deliver real change.

Read the full article at MSNBC

The Founders Would Have Been on the Front Lines of No Kings Day

The Fulcrum, Oct. 19, 2025 — by Ronald L. Hirsch

Hirsch effectively argues that No Kings Day stands firmly in the American tradition of resisting concentrated, unaccountable power. He revisits the Declaration of Independence’s bill of particulars against King George—dissolving representative bodies, subordinating courts, swelling patronage and enforcement—and maps those warnings onto today’s executive overreach and contempt for checks and balances. Despite attempts to smear the protests as extremist, the piece frames them as a civic duty: a peaceful defense of constitutional balance through participation, not violence. The takeaway: opposing would-be monarchy isn’t anti-American—it’s the point of the American experiment.

➜ Read the full story at The Fulcrum

American Democracy Might Be Stronger Than Donald Trump


POLITICO Magazine, Sept. 19, 2025 — by Jonathan Schlefer

Schlefer argues that while Trump threatens democratic norms, the U.S. has unusual sources of resilience compared with countries that slid into autocracy. Rich, long-lived democracies rarely die; the U.S. presidential system’s checks and balances make wholesale court-packing and constitutional rewrites harder than in parliamentary systems; and Trump’s popularity is far below the sky-high approval that enabled figures like Fujimori and Bukele to crush checks. A robust legal profession and civil society can resist overreach, and the Supreme Court—even with conservative justices—has limits and incentives that don’t align with blind Trumpism. Risks remain (inequality, polarization, episodic lawlessness, rising political violence), but large, nonviolent protest—including movements approaching the 1–3.5% participation range—signals broad opposition and can deter authoritarian consolidation. Bottom line: U.S. democracy is wounded, not doomed.

Read the full story → https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2025/09/19/american-democracy-resilience-00548910

American Spring? How Nonviolent Protest in the U.S. Is Accelerating

Waging Nonviolence — Erica Chenoweth, June 2025

Political scientist Erica Chenoweth reports that protest activity during Trump’s second term has surged far beyond 2017 levels — and remained overwhelmingly nonviolent. Drawing on data from the Crowd Counting Consortium, she finds that April and May 2025 alone saw nearly 5,000 anti-Trump demonstrations nationwide, with participation exceeding a million people on single days. From Hands Off to No Kings, the actions spanned all 50 states, including rural and conservative areas. Remarkably, over 99.5 percent of events recorded no injuries, arrests, or property damage. Chenoweth calls this an unprecedented level of discipline for a movement of such scale — evidence that large-scale, peaceful resistance is not only possible but accelerating across the country.

Read the full article at Waging Nonviolence