Suburbanites embrace anti-Trump resistance before No Kings protests, saying, 'This is our fight' [View all]
Source: AP
Updated 9:51 AM EDT, March 26, 2026
MONTCLAIR, N.J. (AP) A few years ago, Allison Posner was barely involved in politics. Now the 42-year-old mother of two from Maplewood, New Jersey, hands out food and diapers to immigrant families outside a nearby detention facility. She waves signs on a highway overpass between school pickups and orthodontist appointments. And this weekend, shell lead a No Kings protest march across this affluent town alongside her husband, her children and thousands of others who are convinced President Donald Trump represents a direct threat to American democracy.
The people in the suburbs are definitely radicalizing, said Posner, a freelance actor.
A growing faction of concerned citizens living in suburban communities across the United States places once known for political moderation or even conservatism are increasingly positioned on the front lines of the anti-Trump resistance. More than a year into the Republican presidents second term, the soccer moms are becoming bona fide activists taking to their well-manicured streets to fight Trump and his allies.
The leftward lurch could cost Republicans control of Congress for the presidents final two years in office. It could also reshape the Democratic Party by elevating a fresh crop of fiery progressive candidates emboldened to push back against the Trump administration more aggressively than the establishment may prefer.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/donald-trump-suburbs-no-kings-resistance-7f42979bbd254f3e4e5d79ec252e0cc2