World Pride comes to Washington in the shadow of the Trump administration
Share and Follow

WASHINGTON — The World Pride 2025 welcome concert, with pop icon Shakira performing at Nationals Stadium, isn’t until May 31. But for host city Washington, D.C., the festivities started with a string of localized Pride events on Saturday, including Trans Pride.

Hundreds of LGBTQ rallies, seminars, parties, after-parties and after-after-parties are planned for the next three weeks across the nation’s capital, including Black Pride and Latin Pride. It all culminates in a two-day closing festival on June 7 and 8 with a parade, rally and concerts on Pennsylvania Avenue by Cynthia Erivo and Doechii.

The biannual international event typically draws more than a million visitors from around the world and across the LGBTQ spectrum. But this year’s events will carry both a special resonance and a particular sense of community-wide anxiety due to the policies of President Donald Trump’s administration.

Trump’s public antipathy for trans protections and drag shows has already prompted two international LGBTQ organizations, Egale Canada and the African Human Rights Coalition, to issue warnings against traveling to the U.S. at all. The primary concern is that trans or nonbinary individuals will face trouble entering the country if passport control officers enforce the administration’s strict binary view of gender status.

“I think it’s a fair assumption that the international numbers won’t be as high due to the climate and the uncertainties,” said Ryan Bos, executive director of the Capital Pride Alliance. “At the same time we know that there’s an urgency and importance to showing up and making sure we remain visible and seen and protect our freedoms.”

The "Freedom to Be" quilt laid out on the grass on the National Mall.
The “Freedom to Be” quilt laid out on the grass on the National Mall.Samuel Corum / Getty Images

Anxiety over Trump’s approach to LGBTQ rights

Opposition to transgender rights was a key point for Trump’s presidential campaign last year and he’s been following through since returning to the White House in January, with orders to recognize people as being only male or female, keep transgender girls and women out of sports competitions for females, oust transgender military troops, restrict federal funding for gender-affirming care for transgender people under age 19 and threaten research funding for institutions that provide the care.

All the efforts are being challenged in court; judges have put some policies on hold but are currently letting the push to remove transgender service members move forward. An Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll found support for some of his efforts.

In February, Trump launched a takeover at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, publicly promising to purge drag shows from the institution’s stages. Within days of that takeover, the Kennedy Center abruptly pulled out of plans to host the International Pride Orchestra as part of a week-long series of World Pride crossover events entitled Tapestry of Pride. In the wake of that cancellation, the Capital Pride Alliance cancelled the entire week and moved some of the Tapestry events to alternate venues.

Some potential international participants have already announced plans to skip this year’s events, either out of fear of harassment or as a boycott against Trump’s policies. But others have called for a mobilization to flood the capital, arguing that establishing a presence in potentially hostile spaces is the precise and proud history of the community.

“We’ve been here before. There is nothing new under the sun,” said D.C. Council Member Zachary Parker, who is gay. “While this is uncharted territory … a fight for humanity is not new to those in the LGBTQ+ community.”

President Donald Trump looks down from the Presidential Box in the Opera House at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
President Donald Trump looks down from the Presidential Box at the Kennedy Center on March 17.Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

Showing up could carry symbolic weight

A recent editorial in the The Blade by Argentinian activist Mariano Ruiz argued for “the symbolic weight of showing up anyway,” despite the legitimate concerns.

“If we set the precedent that global LGBTQI+ events cannot happen under right-wing or anti-LGBTQI+ governments, we will effectively disqualify a growing list of countries from hosting,” Ruiz wrote. “To those who say attending World Pride in D.C. normalizes Trump’s policies, I say: What greater statement than queer, trans, intersex, and nonbinary people from around the world gathering defiantly in his capital? What more powerful declaration than standing visible where he would rather we vanish?”

The last World Pride, in 2023, drew more than 1 million visitors to Sydney, Australia, according to estimates. It’s too early to tell whether the numbers this year will match those, but organizers admit they are expecting international attendance to be affected.

Destination D.C., which tracks hotel booking numbers, estimated that bookings for this year during World Pride are about 10% behind the same period in 2024, but the organization notes in a statement that the numbers may be skewed by a “major citywide convention” last year that coincided with what would be the final week of World Pride this year.

Still, as the date approaches, organizers and advocates are predicting a memorable party. If international participation is measurably down this year, as many are predicting, the hope is that domestic participants will make a point of attending.

“The revolution is now,” said Parker, the D.C. council member. “There is no greater demonstration of resistance than being present and being you, and that is what World Pride is going to represent for millions of folks.”

Share and Follow
You May Also Like
Is 'Hocus Pocus 3' happening? Here's the latest we know

Is ‘Hocus Pocus 3’ in the Works? Here’s Everything We Know

Midler’s posts began Oct. 1 and feature references to the cult classic…
Sydney Sweeney earns major career triumph after American Eagle uproar

Sydney Sweeney Achieves Significant Career Success After American Eagle Controversy

Sydney Sweeney marked a major milestone in her career, just two months…
Gov. Greg Abbott officially names Texarkana as Film Friendly

Texas Governor Allows Trump to Deploy National Guard Troops Outside the State

() — Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on Sunday confirmed that he has…
Israeli woman becomes first to conceive child fathered by IDF soldier killed in Hamas war

Israeli woman becomes first to conceive child fathered by IDF soldier killed in Hamas war

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! On June 11, Hadas…
Chicago crime: Police department warns of fake rideshare driver accused of sexual assault incidents in Old Town, Gold Coast

Mexican Authorities Detain Nelson Arturo ‘N,’ Suspected Leader of Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua Criminal Group

MEXICO CITY — Mexico’s Security Ministry said Saturday that it arrested an…
Inside Emma Watson's sheltered life of luxury at Oxford

Exploring Emma Watson’s Luxurious and Private Oxford Experience

As one of the older students at Oxford University, Emma Watson, the…
Trump unloads on Netanyahu during phone call

Trump Criticizes Netanyahu in Phone Conversation

President Donald Trump used explicit language while expressing his frustration with Israeli…
Trump aide Stephen Miller gets called 'the face of evil' by his cousin

Stephen Miller, Trump’s aide, labeled ‘the face of evil’ by his cousin

Stephen Miller, an advisor to Trump, was labeled ‘the face of evil’…