Amy Walter:

It's not so much where they are actually protesting, because it seems like it is popping up in all kinds of states, red states and blue states, Democratic governors, Republican governors.

What stands out is some of the polling we have right now on how people feel about the stay-at-home orders. And what it suggests is, these folks who are out there protesting represent a pretty small element of the American public opinion right now.

About 30 percent, both in a new NBC/Wall Street Journal a Pew poll, saying that they are more worried that their governor or the country won't open up soon enough than they are worried that we will open up too soon and more people will get sick.

The question now, Amna, is whether this 30 percent represents a ceiling or whether that is a floor. Will we see that start to grow, especially if the president keeps focusing on this and focusing his anger on certain governors?

Because what we saw in, for example, in the Pew poll, is that while Democrats are united on the worry that government is going to open too — is going to allow businesses to open too soon, and maybe the spread will get out of control that way, Republicans are evenly divided on this question.

And so I'm going to be watching very closely over this next week or so to see how the president is responding, as some of these states are saying they are going to open at the end of this week, like Georgia, or starting in the very first week in May.