Detroit, MI
'No Kings Day': Thousands to protest Trump in Metro Detroit and across the country
Thousands march in ‘No Kings’ Day protests
Demonstrators will take to Detroit, Ann Arbor, Ferndale, Dearborn and several other towns to protest the Trump agenda on the same day President Trump holds a parade in Washington honoring the 250th birthday of the Army.
DETROIT (FOX 2) – Saturday is a big day in American democracy as thousands of “No Kings Day” protests are set to take place around the country, with many across metro Detroit slated as well.
Local perspective:
Demonstrators will take to Detroit, Ann Arbor, Ferndale, Dearborn and several other towns to protest the Trump agenda on the same day President Trump holds a parade in Washington honoring the 250th birthday of the Army.
Detroit Police say they expect these protests to continue a tradition of peaceful demonstrations, but they will be looking out for bad actors.
The same is true for Ferndale, even all the way up to the Attorney General’s office.
Both political sides say this should all be about exercising free speech.
On a Farmington Hills bridge overlooking I-696, liberal demonstrators got a head start on the “No Kings Day” protests slated for this weekend, pushing back against President Donald Trump’s MAGA agenda – the same day the Commander-in-Chief hosts the Army’s 250th Birthday Parade in Washington.
Big picture view:
More than 1800 “No Kings” protests around the nation are set to coincide with the Army parade Saturday which also happens to be the President’s 79th birthday.
Similar gatherings are planned for Detroit, Ferndale and Ann Arbor.
Both sides are hoping the events are largely peaceful.
“As long they are non-violence and they’re actually protests that are peaceful, and they represent their First Amendment rights, I honor those types of protests – even if I disagree with them. That’s one of the reasons why I served in the Army is to make sure everyone has the right to their free speech,” said former state lawmaker Andrew “Rocky” Raczkowski.
Democratic Attorney General Dana Nessel’s team will be watching closely.
“I think it’s going to be largely peaceful,” she said. “Will there be a few bad apples here and there that seek to take advantage of the situation to make trouble? Probably. But I have every confidence in the world that local law enforcement will be able to handle it.”
Dig deeper:
Both sides say they do not expect a repeat of the violent clashes in L.A. in the aftermath of ICE raids being conducted amid disagreements between federal and Golden State authorities.
“You had ICE that was coming in and making a number of arrests, and they were doing it without coordinating at all with local law enforcement, so local law enforcement wasn’t there to ensure, you know, that the public was safe,” Nessel said.
Organizers say “No Kings” is about much more than immigration.
Detroit, MI
Detroit Tigers defeated by St. Louis Cardinals 5-3
The Detroit Tigers were beaten 5-3 by the St. Louis Cardinals at Comerica Park on Sunday night. Iván Herrera’s two-run single capped a four-run fifth inning for the Cards in the finale of a three-game series.
Iván Herrera’s two-run single capped a four-run fifth inning and the St. Louis Cardinals salvaged the finale of a three-game series with a 5-3 victory over the Detroit Tigers on Sunday night.
Nolan Gorman, Victor Scott II and Pedro Pagés each scored a run and knocked in another for the Cardinals.
St. Louis starter Kyle Leahy (1-1) gave up two runs and five hits in five innings. Riley O’Brien pitched the ninth for his second save.
Kerry Carpenter led the Detroit offense with his second homer in two days. Tigers starter Keider Montero (0-1) gave up three runs — two earned — and three hits in 4 1/3 innings.
Montero was recalled from Triple-A Toledo on Saturday after Justin Verlander was placed on the 15-day injured list due to left hip inflammation. Verlander had been scheduled Sunday to make his first start at Detroit’s ballpark in a Tigers uniform since the 2017 season.
Colt Keith led off the Detroit third with a single. Leahy retired the next two batters before Carpenter launched a 425-foot drive to straightaway center field to give the Tigers a 2-0 lead.
The Cardinals scored their first two runs in the fifth on Pages’ RBI single and Scott’s squeeze bunt. Herrera smacked his two-out, two-run single off Enmanuel De Jesus.
Javier Báez’s sacrifice fly in the sixth cut the Cardinals’ lead to 4-3. Gorman’s sacrifice fly in the eighth made it 5-3.
Up next
Cardinals: RHP Andre Pallante (1-0, 0.00 ERA) is scheduled to start the opener of a three-game series Monday night at Washington.
Tigers: RHP Casey Mize (0-1, 1.50) pitches the opener of a four-game series Monday night at Minnesota.
Detroit, MI
Strong storms leave trail of damage across Metro Detroit — cleanup could take weeks
MONROE COUNTY, Mich. – Strong storms swept through parts of Metro Detroit Saturday evening, downing trees, toppling power lines and damaging property across Monroe and Wayne counties.
Matt Rose, owner of Rose Tree Service in Monroe County, and his crew hit the ground running to help with the recovery effort.
“Probably about 5:30 in the afternoon the wind started picking up and all you heard was tornado sirens,” Rose said.
The storms didn’t last long — but the damage they left behind tells a different story.
“Within 20 minutes I’d say. It did a lot of damage in 20 minutes,” Rose said.
The storms left behind splintered trees, downed wires and ripped at least one barn to shreds.
Rob Salenbien of Van Buren Township watched the storm destroy what he described as his family’s entertainment space — right before a major family milestone.
“It’s our entertainment place,” Salenbien said. “We were just hosting my family, my mom and dad is inside – their 60th wedding anniversary is coming up on April 30th, we were going to have a party here on May 3rd.”
Salenbien and his family say they are thankful no one was hurt.
As for the cleanup, Rose says crews are still working to finish up damage left by a previous storm — and now they have even more on their hands. He estimates the cleanup from this latest round of storms could take weeks.
“We were still finishing up the last storm of trees broken on houses and stuff like that,” Rose said.
Copyright 2026 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.
Detroit, MI
Mitch Albom: Detroit Opening Day tradition embraces the local perfectly
Detroit Tigers fans get pictures with tiger statue at Comerica Park
Detroit Tigers fans get their picture taken with the tiger statue outside Comerica Park on April 3, 2026 for Opening Day.
To many people, it makes no sense. Here was the seventh game of a 162-game baseball season, the Detroit Tigers had lost four of the six already played, yet seemingly the entire city converged on downtown Friday, April 3, to get into the stadium, or sit outside the stadium, or just hang around the stadium.
They stuffed bars and restaurants. They drank beer despite the early hour. They wore orange or blue clothing and caps with an Old English “D.” There is no way to count how many total people swarmed the streets, or how many of them had called in sick to their jobs to be here.
We call it Opening Day, and in Detroit it is virtually a holiday. Not elsewhere. Other cities don’t make this fuss. To many of them, going wild for the seventh game of the season makes no sense.
And that’s OK.
In fact, it’s perfect.
Far from the only nonstandard tradition
Opening Day made me think about how many things we do around these parts that are uniquely ours, traditions that we cherish but which don’t necessarily travel.
The Dream Cruise. It began as a charity event, and is now is a fixture on the August calendar. But if you tell someone in Boston or San Diego that thousands of people sit in lawn chairs along a busy boulevard to watch old cars drive past, you’ll get laughed out of the room.
The Independence Day Fireworks. Yes, other cities have them. No, they don’t have them in late June. We do. Supposedly we do this because of our proximity to Canada, which celebrates on a different schedule. Of course, Canada Day is July 1, and America’s holiday is July 4, so someone should explain how June got in there.
But, hey, maybe they shouldn’t. It’s our tradition. And that’s what’s important.
Sweetest Day. Hate to break this to area lovers, but that’s not really a thing in the most of the country.
Paczki Day – yes, it’s a way to celebrate Fat Tuesday, but it’s much bigger here in the Midwest than in other regions.
The Charity Preview at the Detroit Auto Show. That’s like the Motor City’s Met Gala, but it doesn’t exist elsewhere. And auto shows in general are not the must-see events they are in our town.
Traditions like throwing octopi at hockey games, singing “born and raised in South Detroit!” chanting “Onward Down the Field” when the Lions score or yelling “DEEE-TROIT BAS-KET-BALLLLLL!” are things you will not witness anywhere else.
And it may be a hot dog everywhere else, but it’s a coney here.
If all of this makes us quirky, well, quirky we should be. Because in a world of increasing homogenization, local traditions are in peril.
A taste for tradition
Consider what the internet and multinational corporations desire. Everyone on the same page at the same time.
Apple wants the whole world to line up at a given hour for the new iPhone. Taylor Swift wants the whole world hanging on her latest release. Local coffee shops get swallowed by chains. Local eateries surrender to fast food.
As someone who travels for work, I can tell you, decades ago when you went to the South, you heard different music on the radio. You went out West, you saw different retail outlets. You felt like an outsider. You felt like you were someplace new and wondrous.
Today, Nashville looks like Austin looks like Raleigh looks like Phoenix. There’s your P.F. Chang’s next to your Cheesecake Factory. There’s your Best Buy alongside your Costco. The goal of global economies is scale, big numbers, national – even international – audiences. Everyone wants to be the Super Bowl.
But what of the joy of regional customs? Local traditions? The food you can only get here, the music you can only hear there. As the internet shrinks our distance, it also fades our individuality.
When I was a kid in Philadelphia, they had a parade every New Year’s Day, where string bands marched and people wore these crazy costumes, painted their faces, and competed in different categories. It was called the Mummers Parade, and in my youthful naivete, I thought every city did this. Later I realized it was unique to Philly, and in fact, many outsiders found it silly.
Well, as Paul McCartney sang, it isn’t silly at all. Local color shades who we are. Local activities give us a sense of identity. Local traditions bind us to our hometowns, and our shared memories with neighbors.
So we can ask “Did you go to Opening Day?” around here and people know what we mean. There’s something precious about that. In an age of everyone buying from Amazon and eating at McDonald’s, we should fiercely protect what makes us unique.
So yeah, wearing a “Trammell” jersey or telling your friends, “I’ll meet you at Mario’s before the game for the lobster buffet” may make no sense to outsiders. Good. It’s not supposed to.
Contact Mitch Albom: malbom@freepress.com. Check out the latest updates on his charities, books and events at MitchAlbom.com. Follow @mitchalbom on x.com.
-
South-Carolina1 week agoSouth Carolina vs TCU predictions for Elite Eight game in March Madness
-
Atlanta, GA1 day ago1 teenage girl killed, another injured in shooting at Piedmont Park, police say
-
Vermont1 week ago
Skier dies after fall at Sugarbush Resort
-
Movie Reviews4 days agoVaazha 2 first half review: Hashir anchors a lively, chaos-filled teen tale
-
Politics1 week agoTrump’s Ballroom Design Has Barely Been Scrutinized
-
Entertainment4 days agoInside Ye’s first comeback show at SoFi Stadium
-
Atlanta, GA1 week agoFetishist ‘No Kings’ protester in mask drags ‘Trump’ and ‘JD Vance’ behind her wheelchair
-
Politics1 week agoJD Vance says he was ‘obsessed’ with UFOs, believes aliens are actually ‘demons’