Expert Notes the Predominance of One Demographic at ‘No Kings’ Protests, Draws an Amusing Conclusion
“The ‘No Kings’ protests, from what I’ve seen in person and on TV, it seems to me like a big venting session. It’s almost like a big group therapy.”
Organizers of last weekend’s “No Kings” protests estimate that seven million people participated in over 2,700 cities and towns across the country. Fox News reported this week that, according to researchers at American University who track protest movements, one segment of the population dominated the rallies: “the typical attendee was an educated white woman in her 40s who learned about the demonstration through friends or social media.”
Fox reached out to psychotherapist Jonathan Alpert for an explanation. “What we’re seeing is a kind of group therapy playing out in the streets,” he noted. “The protests were a snapshot of an era when emotional catharsis and civic activism have begun to blur.”
Alpert elaborated further:
The ‘No Kings’ movement allows people to feel belonging and community. Sharing grievances with like-minded people feels good, but it doesn’t necessarily change anything.
“Therapy speak” is everywhere — in dating apps, on the news, even in political rallies. People start labeling others as narcissists or traumatized when those aren’t clinical diagnoses.
People are craving community, and this gives them a place to channel that. They’re surrounded by others who validate how they feel, and that validation can be addictive. Some protesters are equating the “No Kings” movement with the Civil Rights Movement. In their minds, there’s an equivalency, but there really isn’t. They want to be part of something historically meaningful, and that longing can distort perspective.
That fleeting catharsis can also mask something darker.
A lot of times people are unhappy in their own lives. They may have anxiety or anger, and they project that onto others. That’s partly what we’re seeing play out at these rallies.
Jonathan Alpert: The ‘No Kings’ protests, from what I've seen in person and on TV, it seems to me like a big venting session. It's almost like a big group therapy. @DailyMail #TherapyNation https://t.co/XFILh0a9YV
— Jonathan Alpert (@JonathanAlpert) October 26, 2025
Alpert may be onto something. A decade of dealing with President Trump has clearly pushed Democrats over the edge. Over time, their collective case of “Trump Derangement Syndrome” has deepened, and their assaults on Trump and his supporters have grown less tactical and disciplined, and more reactive and desperate in tone.
Trump’s victory last year left Democrats reeling. They’d thrown every possible obstacle in his path, including lawfare, yet there he was on Jan. 20, taking the oath of office as the 47th president of the United States.
As Alpert noted, sharing grievances with like-minded people can be deeply reassuring. Protesters knew they would be surrounded by others who share their view that Trump represents an authoritarian threat. No matter how detached from reality those beliefs may be, the crowd would validate them, creating a temporary sense of safety in a like-minded environment.
Additionally, psychological research actually has found “a statistical correlation between liberal political affiliation and higher levels of neuroticism, especially among women.”
While it’s obvious that many factors shape both political orientation and mental well-being, and it’s impossible to say with certainty that self-identified liberal women are more neurotic than their conservative counterparts, numerous studies have found a stronger association between liberal political views and higher levels of reported distress or neurotic traits compared with conservatives.
The American Affairs Journal looked at the various studies out there on this topic and concluded not only that a “well-being gap” between liberals and conservatives is a real thing, but also that “conservatives are happier than liberals.”
The gap manifests clearly across all age groups and is present as far back as the polling goes. In the General Social Survey, for instance, there has been a consistent 10 percentage point gap between the share of conservatives versus liberals who report being “very happy” in virtually every iteration since 1972 (when the GSS was launched).
Academic research consistently finds the same pattern. Conservatives do not just report higher levels of happiness, they also report higher levels of meaning in their lives. The effects of conservatism seem to be enhanced when conservatives are surrounded by others like themselves.
Alpert’s conclusions about the unusually high turnout for the “No Kings” protests, particularly by educated, liberal, white women in their 40s, point to a very different reality than organizers would have us believe. Rather than demonstrating that large numbers of Americans see Trump as a unique danger to democracy, the response suggests that participation in these rallies may have helped fill a personal psychological need among attendees.
As Democrats have drifted away from traditional religious affiliation in recent years, many appear to have brought a kind of religious fervor into their politics. When confronted with opposing views, they often respond with emotional appeals and personal attacks, while conservatives tend to approach disagreements in a more grounded and fact-focused manner. And, frankly, conservative women may simply have more constructive ways to spend a lovely autumn afternoon than attending a political protest.
Elizabeth writes commentary for Legal Insurrection and The Washington Examiner. She is an academy fellow at The Heritage Foundation. Please follow Elizabeth on X or LinkedIn.
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Comments
And, they hate Trump because even though they don’t find him attractive, they know he judges women by their appearance, and they don’t make the cut by a long shot.
The one big flaw in this analogy is that the purpose of group therapy is to draw all the deviants back towards the center of rationality… not to let their deviations mutually reinforce and heterodyne.
This is IMO an example of ‘self medication’ on a group basis. Here the attendees are lonely cat lady Karens who must keep convincing themselves that they are ‘single by choice’, ‘don’t need Men’ and importantly now that they’ve passed their prime reproductive window that ‘they didn’t/still don’t want children of their own’. If they can’t fill their void with some replacement sense of belonging and purpose then they must admit the emptiness in their lives and lack of purpose and selfishness of their choices.
No therapist sent them to these rallies. Nope, these 40 something Karens sent themselves seeking to fill the self created void in their lives that once upon a time would have been occupied with a Husband and Children. The ironic part is how quickly these these folks label others often projecting their own issues; narcissism as a prime example. Worse still will be in a decade when many of these Women having spent their salaries as fast as it came in have little to no personal retirement savings and SSA benefits are reduced…add to this many of the jobs these folks do may be replaced by AI or eliminated entirely as cost saving measures when companies and govt junk DEI, CRT and HR Karens.
You’re not allowed to say “deviate” now. The word is “diverge”, which implies that there isn’t one way people are supposed to be, just a range of options, and some people diverge from the crowd more than others.
Therefore the aim of therapy is not to help people converge, since there’s no reason to prefer the more common status to the less common ones; rather it’s to help people be happy with who and what they are and not want to be more like everyone else.
So by these standards congregating with others who have diverged in the same way is actually good therapy, because it reinforces their divergence.
I said it deliberately, and I meant every letter of it.
You should know by now that I don’t pass my comments through focus groups, and I don’t believe everybody has “their own truths.”
I read his comment as sarcasm…..
AWFLs. God save us all from the old barren cat ladies.
All of these women fantasized about being Monica Lewinski. “No Kings” my @ss. They yearn to be on their knees in front of the king.
That’s why they voted for Kamaltoe because she lived their fantasy.
That’s because lazy, unimaginative women try to wield power (mostly over other women) through their association with a powerful man. It never occurs to them to become powerful in their own right.
Hard commentary.
Some BS, but a lot of truth.
They are addicts who are chasing that magical first “high” they experienced at an anti-war rally in DC in 1970. Portland has a dedicated cluster of 50 who are at every protest and you can spot wherre they live as they have a yard sign for every cause under the sun. Watch “Return of the Secaucus Seven” and all is explained. Ask them to define a bigot and then walk away.
If they’re in their ’40s, their first demos would have been the ANSWER demos against the war on al Qaeda.
I imagine it’s sort of like the guy in the next neighborhood that has every sort of brightly colored and/or whirling tchotchke plugged into his lawn, and every inch of his cottage roof covered with model railroads… except more hostile.
“Ask them to define a bigot and then walk away.”
That’s the kind of question their Gen Z grandkids need to ask them and then watch them fail open like a tripped circuit breaker.
Sorry, @MajorWood.
Some one forgot: they are being paid.
I think the young ones were being paid. The geezers had nothing better to do.
Women in their 40’s would be millennials. The women I see at local protests are in their 60’s + GenX apathy rides again.
Way back when I was young living in Manhattan, we would occasionally visit the Moreno Theatre of Psychodrama. Admission was either free, or nominal. Members of the audience could volunteer to go up on the stage and act out some personal problem. Sometimes one would see real drama with people having emotional breakdowns. Moreno was a pioneer in using psychodrama as a therapeutic technique.
Some of these anti-Trump demonstrations look like a kind of psychodrama. People with real emotional problems acting up to feel better. Sometimes we see real violence. Just today ZeroHedge carried a story:
“A deranged leftist in Massachusetts has been arrested and charged after he violently attacked a man wearing an inflatable costume of President Trump.”
The guy with the costume was just having fun. All of a sudden he suffers a very violent attack. We watching a social breakdown of a very serious kind. I suspect the techniques the US used for color revolutions in foreign countries have now turned inward.
The Color Revolution theory eerily makes sense.
Costume guy is lucky to still have his head.
All I see is a big temper tantrum by a bunch of overgrown toddlers that aren’t getting what they want. Frack them
The only ones I saw were 20 or so geezers at the side of the road, some in wheelchairs looking like they will soon meet the Reaper, holding signs. Pathetic.
60s radicals that have avoided the implementation of their fantasy policies until the end of their life.
They wanted to give it all to minorities in the 1960s…only after their time. No Kings is the 60s retread version of Sweet Meteor Of Death.
Aging hippies.
How many of these women are single and don’t have any children? How many would be happy in their 50’s 60’s 70’s?