
As DC welcomes the world for Pride, marchers spotlight rollbacks of LGBTQ rights in US
CNN
Attendees at Sunday’s march, which traveled along the National Mall and ended steps from the US Capitol, said the stakes of protecting the LGBTQ community amid recent actions by the Trump administration hung over the celebrations.
Even with a theme of reaching people around the world, US politics took center stage as Washington, DC, hosted World Pride 2025, an international festival celebrating the LGBTQ community. The celebrations throughout the weekend, which included a parade, free concerts featuring artists Cynthia Erivo and Doechii plus a march on Sunday, marked the 50th anniversary of Pride celebrations in the nation’s capital. Organizers described the event as a moment to “celebrate, educate, support, and inspire” the global LGBTQ community. “World Pride is occurring at a crucial time, bringing together voices from around the world to support the LGBTQ+ community’s ongoing fight for equality, visibility, and justice,” the event’s website notes, describing this year’s festival as a “historic moment.” Attendees at Sunday’s march, which traveled along the National Mall and ended steps from the US Capitol, said the stakes of protecting the LGBTQ community amid recent actions by the Trump administration hung over the celebrations. The Trump administration has broadly pressured companies to end diversity and inclusion programs, taken steps to ban transgender service members from serving in the military and restricted access to gender-affirming care for young people. Liz Bauer, a first-grade teacher in DC, said she’s “really worried” about the message the administration is sending to transgender children, including those who she has taught in her classroom. “It’s really important that we continue to push back, even in small ways, to find inclusive things that we can do for students, including just giving them voices and giving them space,” Bauer said, “and protecting every time that someone tries to change their ability to exist because they’re still going to exist.”

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth announced Monday that the Pentagon is taking administrative action to punish Sen. Mark Kelly, a retired Navy captain, by cutting his retirement pay for participating in a video where he and other Democratic lawmakers reminded US service members of their duty to refuse illegal orders.












