By Olivia O’Neal TheStatehouseFile.com October 18, 2025
ThousandsĀ of protestors gathered on the Indiana Statehouse lawn Saturday for the No Kings 2.0 protest, led by Indivisible Central Indiana with help from Concerned Clergy of Indianapolis, the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana, MADVoters Indiana and Women4Change in opposition of the Trump administrationāsĀ agenda, including immigration arrests and early redistricting efforts.
The Indianapolis protest was one ofĀ 44Ā taking placeĀ across the stateĀ in cities as large as Fort Wayne and small as Brookville, with nearlyĀ 3,000Ā demonstrations occurring across the country and an estimated 7 million people in total attending. This secondĀ nationwideĀ protest was planned by several nonprofits and organizations, including the American Federation of Teachers and the League of Conservation Voters.
Jennifer Midkiff, a professional harpist and music teacher from Noblesville, sang Woody Guthrieās āAll You Fascists Bound to Loseā shortly after No Kings 2.0 began at 11 a.m. The weather was crisp, sunny and breezyāa sharp contrast to the rainy, overcastĀ No Kings protestĀ on June 14. Instead of chanting from beneath raincoats and umbrellas, several attendees donned inflatable costumes of dinosaurs, unicorns and chickens, perhaps inspired by recentĀ Portland, Oregon, protestors who dressed as inflatable frogs as they demonstrated against ICE arrests.
āWe got a zoo here,ā said one man.
Rev. David Green, president of Concerned Clergy of Greater Indianapolis, followed the live music with a speech.
āIn America, we donāt value kings; we value democracy,ā he said. āWeāre not subjects, weāre citizens.ā
Indianapolis’ No Kings 2.0 protest Saturday at the Indiana Statehouse was one of nearly 3,000 occurring across the country. (Photo/Olivia O’Neal of TheStatehouseFile.com)
Every anecdote and speech was met with cheers and applause from the crowd. Protestors held U.S. and Indiana flags, chanting phrases like, āWhen Trump says get back, we say fight back.ā Some wore red hats, but instead of MAGA slogans, they bore puns like, āArrest Trump 2026.ā Others raised signs with the words, āHonk if youāre not in the Epstein Files.ā Drivers on North Capitol Avenue listened, and beeps and the sound of revving car engines rose from the road.
A few paces away on the Statehouse lawn, a man was making giant bubbles for children to jump through, and protestorsā pets wagged their tails at passersby or lay asleep on the grass.
āI am angry and disgusted by what is happening in this country, arenāt you?ā asked Karla López Owens.
From the Statehouse stairs, she relayed her experience as an immigrant from Mexico who became the first college graduate in her family. She is now a deputy prosecuting attorney with the Marion County Prosecutorās Office and president of the Indiana Latinx Democratic Caucus.
Danielle Cooney recalls her time in the foster care system during her speech at the No Kings 2.0 protest Saturday at the Indiana Statehouse. (Photo/Olivia O’Neal of TheStatehouseFile.com)
Her story was followed by an anecdote from Danielle Cooney, a member of Live Free Indiana, about her own childhood. When her father was incarcerated for child abuse and the murder of her baby sister, 7-year-old Cooney was placed in the foster-care system. Now a foster mother herself, she advocated for other families separated, but this time by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrests.
She said theĀ ICE detaineesĀ in the Marion County Jail are not criminals and are placed in a system that treats them as āless than human.ā
āWhat is happening in Chicago could happen in Indianapolis,ā Cooney said.
Sen. Fady Qaddoura, D-Indianapolis, told the thousands of protestors that if the Trump administration is successful, the results could be Medicaid cuts, cuts to theĀ Child Care Development Fund, which provides financial assistance to low-income families for child care, and the shifting of power and money to the ultra wealthy.
Qaddoura urged Indiana residents to contact state lawmakers and voice their concerns.
āTell them we are Hoosiers. We live as honest people, and we donāt respect or support cheaters,ā he said. āHoosiers, let’s get to work.ā
Olivia OāNeal is a reporter forĀ TheStatehouseFile.com, a news site powered by Franklin College journalism students.