Vermont
Thousands Say ‘No Kings’ at Protests Across Vermont | Seven Days
For the second time in a matter of months, thousands of people around Vermont on Saturday took to the streets as part of a massive nationwide “No Kings” protest against President Donald Trump and his administration.
Some 50 Vermont cities and towns, from Vergennes and Underhill to St. Albans and Chester, held official protests. At each, dozens or in some cases thousands of people massed in green spaces and along busy thoroughfares to sing songs, wave signs and American flags, and voice their opposition to the way Trump has lead the country during his first nine months in office.
The largest gatherings by far were in Montpelier, where thousands of protesters filled the Statehouse lawn to listen to speakers, and Burlington, where separate groups of marchers converged on downtown City Hall Park for a colorful, musical and somewhat joyous gathering of community.
Creative signs and costumes were abundant among the throngs of people.
In South Burlington, dozens of people holding “No Kings” signs crowded onto a narrow sidewalk along Patchen Road at the Interstate 89 overpass. Most were over 40, with some exceptions, including a man and a woman with two toddlers. They made giant bubbles that floated over the crowd.
A woman wearing an inflatable dinosaur costume would not give her name. “My husband is an immigrant so I’d rather not,” she said. “I’m glad I can represent both of us today. We thought a green card would be enough safety for us.”
Her costume, she said, was a nod to “what’s happening in Portland. I think that humor and silliness seem to be really effective against this administration.”
Another woman who declined to give her name described herself as a member of the “inflatable rebellion.” She wanted to show up with humor — “no anger, no hate, to stand up for integrity.” A nurse, she said she turned down an overtime shift for double pay to be there.
She’s from Thailand and grew up in a country with a king — a good one, King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who united the country. Not like Trump, she said. “I want this to be a wake-up call. That’s what I’m here for.”
Scroll through the slideshow below:
The “No Kings” demonstrations were under intense scrutiny from right-wing media and Trump administration officials, who dismissively referred to the gatherings as “Hate America” rallies. But the scene at the Statehouse was filled with American flags, children playing and smiling faces.
Prior to the demonstrations, an email from “No Kings” organizers briefed protesters on etiquette for the day. Stand two feet back from the street curb and keep sidewalks clear, it read. Smile and wave at any potential hecklers or disruptors, and put down signs and step back when an ambulance or fire truck passes, the instructions said. There were no signs of anything amiss at the Montpelier rally, which went off without a hitch.
U.S. Sen. Peter Welch (D-Vt.) was the first speaker to take the stage on the Statehouse steps. “We need less Trump and more Vermont values in Washington,” Welch said to cheers. He invoked Matthew Lyon, a Vermont senator who was sent to jail in the 1790s for criticizing the president, only to be reelected by Vermonters.
A young child in a firefighter costume popped bubbles blown by protesters wearing inflatable animal suits as speakers took their turn at the podium. One demonstrator in a gray flying squirrel suit held a sign that read “Antifa” in stylish cursive, a reference to the Trump administration’s rhetoric about the antifascist group in Portland, Ore.
Introduced as a “fearless, feisty, ferocious fascist-fighting motorcycle mama from Brattleboro,” U.S. Rep. Becca Balint (D-Vt.) began her speech with a call-and-response chant of “No Kings, No Tyrants, No Dictators!”
“They’re trying to reframe this, and that’s because they’re scared,” Balint said. “We don’t hate America, Donald Trump. We just can’t stand what you have done to our country!”
Nikhil Goyal, a sociologist and former senior policy advisor for U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), spoke to the crowd about the impact of Trump’s policies in Vermont. The crowd booed when Goyal made reference to state Sen. Sam Douglass (R-Orleans), who was outed this week by Politico for participating in a racist and sexist group chat of national Young Republicans.
After days of intense political pressure to resign, Douglass announced on Friday that he would step down effective Monday at noon.
Geri Peterson, lead organizer of 50501 Vermont, sang an original song while trans flags were passed out in the crowd. “Our existence, our basic biology, has been turned into a political talking point,” Petersen said of the Trump administration’s attacks on trans rights. “Behind every headline is another person trying to survive another day,” she said.

“It’s OK to feel overwhelmed about these things, but worrying does not have to be the end of the story,” Clara White, a 14-year-old student at Montpelier High School, said from the podium. “People my age, we’re not just sitting around waiting. We’re more connected than generations before us.”
Rae Carter of Plainfield was also at the first No Kings rally in June. She attended Saturday’s Statehouse protest adorned in bright colors, including a neon green wig. “Things have gotten worse, and the power is with the people,” she said. “Transformation and change is something that requires all of us.”
Loretta Gaidys came from Barre to protest. “I have a lot of relatives that are in the service, and I just look at the man that is leading this country, and it scares the hell out of me,” she said.
Isaac Jensen, a construction and excavation business owner from the Northeast Kingdom, took the stage “to reject the current subversion of American patriotism and the assertion that, because we refuse to allow them to seize unlimited power, we are somehow anti-American.”
As the last speaker, he led the crowd in the pledge of allegiance.
Cathy Resmer contributed reporting.
Vermont
How Vermont basketball erased big deficit to topple Maine
UVM welcomes Adrian Dubois as new men’s soccer coach
Adrian Dubois answers questions from the media following his introductory press conference on Monday, Dec. 22.
Vermont basketball staged a second-half comeback on the strength of its 3-point makes while Maine went cold from the floor as the Catamounts seized a 67-62 America East Conference victory in front of 2,202 at Patrick Gym on Thursday, Jan. 15.
Gus Yalden, despite an off shooting night, sank a dagger 3-pointer with 1 minute, 18 seconds to play as the Catamounts improved to 11-7 overall and 3-0 in league play. Vermont uncorked a 20-1 run in the second half to erase a double-digit lead, and the visiting Black Bears (3-16, 1-3) went 11:01 without a field goal in the game’s most crucial stretch.
TJ Hurley dropped 18 points, Sean Blake totaled 17 points and six assists, Ben Johnson struck for 14 points with a trio of 3s and Yalden finished with eight points and 11 rebounds to carry the Catamounts, who lost to Maine in last year’s America East semifinals on this court.
Keelan Steele’s 17 points and TJ Biel’s dozen led the way for Maine.
Vermont captured its second straight, hard-fought victory at home. Last week, the Catamounts edged Binghamton 60-59. After Jan. 10, the Catamounts sit alone atop the conference.
“That says a lot about these guys, that over the last two games found a way to win games where we could’ve folded,” UVM coach John Becker said.
Johnson: “It’s better to learn after a win than a loss. Hopefully we can keep it going.”
Vermont basketball rallies from 12-point hole in second half
The Catamounts were slow to rotate on switches to start the second half, and Maine took advantage to string together a 13-0 spurt to build a double-digit lead. Steele’s dunk gave the Black Bears a 49-37 advantage with 13:56 to play.
But Steele’s flush was Maine’s last field goal for 11:01. Becker called on his bench and an uptempo style to generate stops and offense.
Hurley, Johnson and David Simon drained 3-pointers in successive trips as Vermont regained the lead, at 51-50, with 8:49 to go.
“I was really challenging the guys to have some grit, have some fight,” Becker said. “And they responded and the floodgates kind of opened and we went on one of those runs. It was a tidal wave.”
Freshman Momo Nkugwa followed with a nifty cut and finish at the rim, Ben Michaels’ threw down a two-handed dunk on a putback and the veteran Hurley used Yalden as a natural pick for a layup and 57-50 margin with less than 6 minute left to complete a 20-1 run.
“Just keep fighting. It’s a game of runs. We got some stops, made some shots and came back there and made a run,” said Johnson, the Bellarmine transfer who made his first start for Vermont. “When they don’t have a chance to set their defense, it opens up the whole floor.”
Maine ended its field-goal drought on Ryan Mabrey’s 3-point splash with 2:06 on the clock, cutting the Vermont lead to 59-55. That deficit was cut in half on Logan Carey’s foul shots, but Yalden drained a long triple at 1:18 to put the game out of reach.
“Patrick (Gym) was rocking tonight in that second half. It was a great atmosphere,” Becker said.
Vermont basketball plays without 2 starters including TJ Long
Vermont basketball were without two starters vs. Maine: Forward Noah Barnett missed his second straight game and veteran TJ Long was seen in a walking boot during wam-ups. New Hampshire transfer Trey Woodyard was also not dressed due to injury.
Becker said Long suffered a lower-body injury in practice and it’s too early to know the severity of it. Barnett has yet to return to practice, Becker added.
Who’s next for Vermont basketball?
The Catamounts start a three-game America East road trip with a date at Albany on Monday, Jan. 19. They also play at UMass Lowell (Jan. 22) and Bryant (Jan. 24) during the road swing.
Vermont women’s basketball at Maine
Vermont women’s basketball outscored Maine 38-25 in the middle quarters to snare a 64-53 America East Conference victory on the road on Thursday, Jan. 15.
Vermont improves to 14-5 overall and 3-1 in America East.
Keira Hanson sank four 3-pointers and tallied 20 points to lead the Catamounts. Nikola Priede added 16 points and five rebounds and Malia Lenz tossed in 14 points to go with 10 boards, four assists and three assists.
Vermont shot 42.9% on 3s and out-rebounded Maine 36-23. The visitors built a 21-point fourth-quarter lead.
Sarah Talon and Adrianna Smith each had 15 points to pace the Black Bears (8-10, 3-2).
Contact Alex Abrami at aabrami@freepressmedia.com. Follow him on X, formerly known as Twitter: @aabrami5.
Vermont
Chittenden County shuttle service for older, disabled residents faces cuts
Dustin Lamore works in the kitchen at an eldercare home in Shelburne, helping to prepare meals for 200 people each day. He’s also blind, which makes getting to work from his Colchester residence each morning a challenge.
The 36-year-old makes use of a state program that provides free, on-demand rides to older adults and people with disabilities. In Chittenden County, Green Mountain Transit has long contracted with the Special Services Transportation Agency, or SSTA, to shuttle users to medical appointments, grocery stores, church services and job sites.
But that program is running out of money, fast, which could leave Lamore without a way to get to work as soon as next month.
“You’re talking about taking away my only mode of transportation,” Lamore said. “I’m beyond frustrated.”
Lamore and others who use the program in Chittenden County are facing new restrictions on the types of trips they may take and how often they can call for a ride. Rides to work and for personal purposes are most likely to go away, Green Mountain Transit General Manager Clayton Clark said.
“You’re talking about taking away my only mode of transportation.”
Dustin Lamore
Clark said he is reluctant to pare back the service, which helps hundreds of people stay connected with their communities and retain their independence.
“Social isolation is extremely bad for people who are living at home with a disability, or who are older,” he said.
But in Chittenden County, the Older Adults and Persons with Disabilities Transportation Program has nearly blown through its $455,000 annual budget in a matter of months, prompting a scramble by local and state officials to find more cash and control costs.
Public transit throughout Vermont faces broad fiscal challenges brought on by stagnant ridership and soaring costs. But unlike Green Mountain Transit’s fixed-route bus service, the on-demand program for older and disabled residents has seen big increases in riders. More than 600 people used the service in Chittenden County last year, and ridership has jumped nearly 25% so far this fiscal year, Clark said.
The cost per ride has spiked as well, not just in Chittenden County. Since the pandemic, fewer people drive the shuttles on a volunteer basis, while consolidation in the state’s health care industry has led to longer trip distances to medical appointments, said Ross MacDonald, public transit program manager for the Vermont Agency of Transportation.
And with a rapidly aging population, officials don’t expect demand to ease anytime soon.
But at a select board meeting Tuesday night in Colchester, Lamore and others told their elected leaders that the restrictions would disrupt their lives.
Rider Debbie Drewniak, 67, said she uses the shuttles to shop for groceries and get to her frequent medical and physical therapy appointments. She’s had limited mobility since a distracted driver struck her while she was walking her Labrador in 2011. The accident also left her with a traumatic brain injury.
“Most of my friends work and are not available to bring me anywhere during the day,” she said.
Drewniak learned of imminent restrictions in a letter she received last month from Green Mountain Transit. The agency has since pushed the changes back until late February, and is allowing towns to pay for additional rides out of their local budgets.
The state transportation agency set aside $265,000 to help shore up the program in Chittenden County. Green Mountain Transit also expects to spend as much as $100,000 from its reserves, and select board members in Williston signaled their intent last week to contribute more municipal funds to limit new trip restrictions. Colchester town leaders said Tuesday that they would look for volunteer drivers and other ways to ease the burden on users there.
The proposed restrictions in Chittenden County — which took effect in Washington, Grand Isle and Franklin counties last month — mirror those that have been in place in other Vermont counties for years.
Northeast Kingdom residents have long been limited to four trips to medical appointments and two to grocery stores per month, Rural Community Transportation spokesperson Lilias Ide said.
Unless others step up, that may be the direction that Chittenden County is headed, too. “We’ve got a lot of work to do to address costs,” MacDonald said.
Lamore said he already tries to limit his use of the service as much as possible. Of the 12 trips he needs to get back and forth to his job at the eldercare home each week, he’s able to arrange private transportation for nine of them.
His continued financial independence, Lamore said, could hinge on whether he can find a ride for the other three.
Vermont
Senators interrogate Vermont Supreme Court nominee about prosecuting on behalf of Trump – VTDigger
MONTPELIER — Michael Drescher prosecuted cases on behalf of the federal government in Vermont during the first year of President Donald Trump’s administration — which dealt him historic immigration cases like those of Rümeysa Öztürk and Mohsen Mahdawi.
Now, Drescher is a nominee to serve on the Vermont Supreme Court, leading senators this week to interrogate his past.
Gov. Phil Scott appointed Drescher to serve on the state’s top court last week, along with former top Vermont federal prosecutor Christina Nolan. Both candidates led Vermont’s U.S. Attorney’s Office under Trump, with Nolan serving in the role during his first presidential term. To serve as a state Supreme Court justice, both nominees need state Senate confirmation.
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Drescher prosecuted the cases against Öztürk and Mahdawi, representing the federal government. Öztürk was a Turkish graduate student at Tufts University who was arrested in Massachusetts by plainclothes officers in March after co-writing a student newspaper op-ed critical of Israel’s war in Gaza. She was then whisked to Vermont, where she was held in an immigration office in St. Albans.
Mahdawi was a Palestinian student activist at Columbia University who vocally opposed Israel’s war in Gaza. He was arrested in Colchester in April during a routine immigration meeting.
Drescher resigned from his role as Vermont’s top federal prosecutor — under the title “First Assistant Attorney” — last week.
“I did that because, in order to be able to speak freely at this hearing, I think I needed to be unencumbered by being employed by the Department of Justice,” Drescher said Tuesday.
Lawmakers in the Senate Judiciary Committee heard from Drescher again on Wednesday, grilling him about his moral compass and views on free speech. Four senators in the committee said they’ve received hundreds of emails about his appointment.
“I still hold concerns about decisions that you made in your role,” Sen. Nader Hashim, D-Windham, the committee’s chair, said. Other senators expressed the same concern.
What was Drescher’s defense? “I was doing my job even though it was unpopular,” he said.
Drescher reminded senators Tuesday that Trump never formally appointed him to the role. He served as assistant U.S. attorney starting in 2002 and was promoted to the second highest position in the office in September 2023. He became the top federal prosecutor in the state last year, when the then-U.S. attorney for Vermont, who had been appointed by former President Joe Biden, resigned upon Trump’s inauguration.
Though Drescher held the office for about a year in an acting capacity, Trump never appointed him to a permanent U.S. attorney or sought his confirmation by the U.S. Senate. Drescher also did not seek out that appointment, he said.
Drescher said Tuesday that he found out in March his office would be prosecuting Öztürk’s case “out of the blue.” He saw the video of masked agents pulling the student into an unmarked car and described it as “irregular at least.” Drescher said he represented the federal government in the case because he didn’t want anyone else in his office to have to bear the burden.
“I could not in good conscience subject anybody in the office to be in that position. So I concluded that if anybody was going to be fired, it was going to be me,” Drescher said Tuesday, his voice cracking with emotion.
Drescher said he didn’t resign from his role because he thought his resignation would only prolong Öztürk’s and Mahdawi’s cases. And he would’ve violated his oath of office to not perform his due diligence in prosecuting the two immigration cases.
Drescher’s decision-making in those two cases influenced why Scott chose him.
“The Governor was aware of Michael’s role in both of those prosecutions and believes he showed great leadership by assigning those cases to himself, rather than asking his team to take the cases,” Amanda Wheeler, the governor’s press secretary, said in an email to VTDigger. “As Michael recognized, these assignments would either put the jobs of his career staff in jeopardy or subject them to threats and abuse from members of the public.”
But for some lawmakers, Drescher’s former position is a hard pill to swallow.
“It doesn’t sit well with me,” said Sen. Tanya Vyhovsky, P/D-Chittenden Central, in an interview.
The civil cases filed on behalf of Öztürk and Mahdawi respectively disputed the legality of their detention. In Öztürk’s case, Drescher repeatedly argued against her release from detention.
To Vyhovsky, that shows that Drescher wasn’t just filling shoes, rather he was in practice enforcing federal immigration actions.
Hashim, in an interview, shared the same concerns as Vyhovsky. The way Drescher handled Öztürk’s case gave him concerns about Drescher’s legal discretion, he said.
The national political climate only increases the need for the committee to do its due diligence when considering the appointments, Vyhovsky said. And she wants to make sure that state Supreme Court justices are committed to protecting people’s rights, she said.
Other senators expressed similar concerns in the Wednesday committee meeting.
“I’ve never seen a crisis point in America like we’re facing,” said Senate President Pro Tempore Phil Baruth, D/P-Chittenden Central. While Trump’s immigration agenda sweeps the country, Congress has “neutered itself” and left too much up to the judiciary, Baruth said.
Drescher told senators he understood those concerns. But he asserted that the legal cases wouldn’t have been able to move forward without competent legal counsel on each side.
He argued that in his former role, he was a counterbalance necessary to have a functioning legal system. And he held the executive branch to a high standard, he said.
Drescher said that while he understands why he’s being associated with Trump’s policies and attitudes, lawyers are not usually judged based on the character of those they represent.
Sen. Robert Norris, R-Franklin, asked Drescher if he would have done anything differently.
“I don’t think so. I don’t think so,” Drescher replied.
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