

Published on: 10/19/2025
This news was posted by Oregon Today News
Description
A brief but substantial show of force from federal officers in Portland late Saturday punctuated a day of peaceful protests throughout Oregon.
Tens of thousands of people participated in “No Kings” events — including marches and rallies in Portland, Salem, Eugene, Roseburg, Bend, Prineville and Pendleton — to oppose President Donald Trump’s mass deportation efforts and deployment of the National Guard to American cities.
Portland has been at the center of that effort. The Trump administration has tried to send hundreds of National Guard members to the city to protect Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers, despite the objections of local leaders who say the president is grossly mischaracterizing a series of mostly nonviolent protests.
Whether the president can legally do that is awaiting a decision in federal court.
Protests were peaceful, with minimal conflict between counterprotesters throughout the day.


















About 3,500 people gathered at the federal courthouse in Eugene. Among the marchers was 66-year-old Bonnie Pettit. She held a sign with a photo of her father in uniform, which read “My father fought fascism in World War II. Now I will.”
“Probably turning in his grave,” Pettit said of her father, “as most of the ‘Greatest Generation’ would be if they saw what was happening to America right now.”
In Douglas County, where Trump won two-thirds of voters, a No Kings rally drew more than 1,000 protesters to Roseburg’s Stewart Parkway. One protester, Lyn Biethan, said she was there because she loves America, and wants to preserve its liberties for future generations. She wore a frog hat in solidarity with Portland’s protesters.
In Bend, hundreds lined the sidewalks and cheered as cars drove by honking their horns. A Cycle Pub full of patrons passed through the crowds and joined in with the cheers. Few, if any, counterprotesters were at the demonstration. About 300 people also protested in nearby Prineville, including two dressed as frogs and one dressed as a kitten.
High above Interstate 84 in Pendleton, about 200 protesters filled a highway overpass. Cars passing below honked occasionally as they passed a demonstrator in an inflatable chicken suit and hanging banners that read “No Monarchy” and “Save Democracy.”
The Oregon Capitol was the site of two protests. There was a No Kings event of more than 1,000 people. Also in Salem was an event known as “Boots Across Oregon,” which included a rally to recall Democratic Gov. Tina Kotek and a memorial for conservative activist Charlie Kirk.
About 150 attended the event, which in its support of Trump’s policies ran counter to the No Kings rally. The two events coexisted with minimal incident.
By far the largest demonstrations of the day occurred in Portland.
By noon on Saturday, thousands of people had gathered in the city’s Pioneer Courthouse Square and many were chanting, praying and singing “America the Beautiful” before their march to the city’s waterfront, where the state’s largest rally took place.
Soon, tens of thousands of people were marching through downtown and on the waterfront, forcing the closure of the Morrison and Hawthorne bridges.
By the evening, a much smaller crowd of about 500 or more had gathered at the ICE facility near the southwest Portland waterfront.
The street was lively, with many protesters creating a party-like atmosphere with dancing in the street and flowers and electric candles on the ground. There were megaphone-led chants of “ICE out of Portland” and “Donald Trump has got to go.” Several counterprotesters and conservative livestreamers were mixed in with the crowd.
About a dozen Department of Homeland Security and other federal officers watched from the roof, keeping dry from the rain under a pop-up canopy tent.
Around 7:30 p.m., the federal agents on the roof unleashed a barrage of tear gas, pepper balls and flash-bangs into the crowd below after officers on the ground had cleared a driveway for vehicles. The gas was thick enough that the ICE building was no longer visible from the street. People inside their inflatable costumes could be seen choking on the fumes.
Several minutes after the officers ceased deploying the munitions, the crowd began dancing again in the street as the cloud of smoke dissipated.
By 10 p.m., the rain was heavy and the crowd of protesters had dwindled to a few dozen people.
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