Hundreds of thousands of people flocked to the nation’s streets Saturday in an eruption of anger, alarm and seething discontent over President Donald Trump’s wholesale remaking of America’s economy, its government and its place in the world.

The so-called “Hands Off” rallies — stretching from the picturesque Maine hamlets to California’s coastal cities — signaled the largest organized opposition since Trump’s gutting of the federal workforce and his numerous other edicts targeting everything from diversity measures to his perceived enemies. They capped a week that saw Wall Street post its most devastating losses since the lead-up to the coronavirus pandemic in 2020, as Trump unveiled his most punishing round of tariffs yet in a moment he coined as “Liberation Day.”

“We are looking at a crisis,” said Nancy Latham, who helped organize a protest in Oakland with the group Indivisible East Bay, where thousands of people rallied outside City Hall before marching through downtown. “We are already in a constitutional crisis, Latham added. “If you ask me, there’s already been an authoritarian breakthrough.”

Protesters waived signs declaring “Trump is a Russian asset” and “DOGE is a criminal conspiracy.” Among them stood Morgan Lynn, 51, who donned a Statue of Liberty costume and railed against what she saw as the “pure hypocrisy and white supremacy” touted by the Trump administration. A community college teacher, she called the notion of Trump’s administration withholding funding “a form of terrorism.”

“They want to destroy us, so they can privatize everything,” Lynn said.

In San Jose, thousands of protesters poured into the downtown area carrying colorful homemade signs that read, “Dump Doge,” “Resist fascism,” and “Hands off our Future.” At a St. James Park rally, protesters banged on drums and chanted “Power to the People” and “United We Stand.”

“This is more than just a moment, this is more than just this afternoon,” said Celeste Walker, a Felton resident and member of chair of Orchard City Indivisible, a self-proclaimed “resistance” group. “We must refuse to be silent. We must declare that we see each other and that we won’t back down.”

“The only way we’re going to get change at this point is by grassroot efforts,” added Karen Uhlin, of San Jose. “People have to make their opinions known.”

In Walnut Creek, an estimated 5,000 people gathered outside the Tesla store at Broadway Plaza to express their anger and dismay, then streamed past Nordstrom, Lululemon and the Apple store.

Jim and Cheryl Lekas, semi-retired small-business owners from Martinez, pushed Jim’s 92-year-old mother, Joyce Lekas, in a wheelchair in the march as she held up a sign saying, “Hands off my Social Security” and “Hands off our schools.”

A former physicist for the federal government, she talked about nearing the end of her life, saying: “I don’t want to leave a country under Trump to my kids and grandkids.”

In recent weeks, siloed protests in February and early March snowballed into increasingly widespread and coordinated demonstrations of disgust and anger at Trump’s administration. Last weekend, protesters swarmed Tesla dealerships across the nation — including in Walnut Creek, Palo Alto, Santa Clara and Berkeley — in a bid to picket outside all of the company’s 275-plus showrooms with signs declaring “Honk if you hate Elon” and “Fight the billionaire broligarchy.”

By contrast, Saturday’s rallies inundated city centers across the nation. In many places, they appeared to be among the largest mass mobilizations since the Women’s March of 2017 after Trump’s first inauguration and the Black Lives Matter demonstrations following George Floyd’s killing by police in Minneapolis in 2020.

“The attacks that we’re seeing, they’re not just political. They are personal, y’all,” said Kelley Robinson, president of the Human Rights Campaign advocacy group, during a rally at the National Mall in Washington, D.C., that included appearances by Democratic members of Congress. “They’re trying to ban our books, they’re slashing HIV prevention funding, they’re criminalizing our doctors, our teachers, our families and our lives.”

“We don’t want this America, y’all,” Robinson added, according to the Associated Press. “We want the America we deserve, where dignity, safety and freedom belong not to some of us, but to all of us.”