District of Columbia
D.C. Pride celebration to include parade, festival, fireworks, and more
More than 600,000 expected to attend weekend events

More than 600,000 people from the D.C. metropolitan area as well as from across the nation and some from other countries were expected to turnout this week for D.C.’s annual Capital Pride parade, festival, and at least a dozen or more related events, including a fireworks display at the city’s Southwest waterfront.
“For a week every June, we enthusiastically welcome to Washington, D.C. over 600,000 LGBTQ+ friends and allies from around the United States and throughout the world for the Capital Pride Celebration, including the popular and free Pride Parade, Festival, and Concert,” according to a statement released by Capital Pride Alliance, the group that organizes most of D.C.’s Pride events.
The group announced this year’s Pride Parade would travel a different route from past years. It will begin at 3 p.m. on Saturday, June 8 at 14th and T Streets, N.W. and travel south along 14th Street to Pennsylvania Avenue, where it will turn left and end at 9th and Pennsylvania Avenue.
As in past years, dozens of contingents from a wide range of organizations and local and federal government agencies were expected to march in the parade or ride in vehicles or floats. Among those scheduled to participate in the parade this year were D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser and members of the D.C. City Council.
Capital Pride has announced that nationally acclaimed performers Billy Porter and Keke Palmer, who were scheduled to perform at the Pride festival the next day, would be leading the parade as the official grand marshals.
“Organizations are encouraged to be creative and use the theme, ‘Totally Radical’ to show that you have pride as participants march along the 1.8-mile Parade route,” Capital Pride says in a statement.
Although the parade will no longer travel past the Dupont Circle area as it has in past years, the annual Capital Pride Block Party will continue as it has in recent years on 17th Street, N.W. between Q and R Streets from 12-10 p.m. on Saturday, June 8. The Capital Pride family gathering will also take place in the afternoon hours at nearby Stead Park.
Another change from past years is a new event at a site near where the parade ends, called a Flashback Tea Dance, which will take place at 6th Street, N.W. and Constitution Avenue, from 3-9 p.m. on June 8, according to a Capital Pride announcement.
Also taking place on the day of the parade is the annual Pride On The Pier party from 2-10 p.m. at The Wharf section of the city’s Southwest waterfront. The event, which is organized by the Washington Blade, will include the showing of the Capital Pride Parade on a large video screen when the parade begins at 3 p.m., a drag show at 3:30 p.m., and fireworks show at 9 p.m. It is free and open to the public, with VIP accommodation available for an admission fee. Visit prideonthepierdc.com for VIP tickets.
The Capital Pride Festival, scheduled for Sunday, June 9, from 12-10 p.m., will be held as it has in recent past years on Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., between 3rd and 7th Streets. Free and open to the public, the festival is the largest annual event of its kind in the national capital region, with more than 300 exhibitors setting up booths, according to Capital Pride officials.
“Engage with over 300 service organizations, social groups, businesses, amateur sports leagues, faith-based groups, educational institutions, government agencies, artists, consultants, potential employers, and much more,” Capital Pride says in its statement announcing this year’s Pride events.
Like past years, this year’s exhibitors were expected to include a wide range of local and national LGBTQ organizations. Also, like recent past years, the festival was to include a wide range of food courts and beverage garden.
In addition, the festival will continue its tradition of offering entertainment on three stages as part of the Capital Pride Concert, which takes place from 12-8 p.m. Among those scheduled to perform from the main Capital Stage located at the east end of the festival with the U.S. Capitol as a backdrop, were singers Billy Porter and Keke Palmer.
Also scheduled to perform were nationally acclaimed singer songwriter Ava Max; opera singer, composer and drag queen Sapphira Cristal; and the female vocalist group Exposé known for their No. 1 Dance Chart hit “Point Of No Return.”
A full list of the 2024 Capital Pride week events can be accessed at capitalpride.org.
District of Columbia
Opening of Pride exhibition at Smithsonian’s African art museum postponed until 2026
Exhibition initially planned to open before WorldPride

An exhibition of the works of art from LGBTQ African artists at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of African Art was abruptly postponed due to “our current budgetary situation,” a museum spokesperson told the Washington Post.
The exhibition is entitled, “Here: Pride and Belonging in African Art.”
The Post, which broke the story about LGBTQ exhibition’s postponement on May 6, reports that the museum denied that the postponement was brought about by the Trump-Vance administration’s executive order restricting certain content at Smithsonian museums or the current political climate.
“This exhibition was on a very ambitious schedule to meet WorldPride, and we did not have enough time to secure all the private sector funds we had hoped to due to shifts in the fundraising environment,” the Post quoted Smithsonian spokesperson Jennifer Mitchell as saying.
Mitchell was referring to plans to open the exhibition in late May to coincide with the WorldPride events, which are scheduled to take place in D.C. from May 17-June 6.
The Post reports that the exhibition is now expected to open in February 2026 and to close at its originally scheduled closing time in August 2026.
The National Museum of African Art’s website describes the LGBTQ exhibition as consisting of “artists across Africa and the diaspora whose artworks connect to their identities and experiences as LGBTQ+ people.” It says those people are “featured as the first continental and diasporic survey of its scale and scope outside of Africa.”
The website statement adds, “The show assembles artists whose work has implicitly or explicitly challenged local and global legacies of homophobia and bigotry, offering images of alternative futures as well as celebrations of intimacy, faith, family, and joy.”
The Post reported that Mitchell “declined to say whether donors had withdrawn their support, explaining that she could not comment on private donors relations.”
Sources familiar with the Smithsonian have pointed out that private donors, including corporations, are the main source of funding for specific Smithsonian exhibitions. The federal government, with funds approved by Congress, traditionally has covered costs supporting the museum buildings, infrastructure, and upkeep.
District of Columbia
Bet Mishpachah to honor Fauci with lifetime achievement award
As part of its 50th anniversary celebration, Bet Mishpachah will present the Harvey Milk Chesed Award to Dr. Anthony S. Fauci in recognition of his groundbreaking leadership in infectious disease research and decades of service to global public health.

Bet Mishpachah, Washington’s LGBTQ synagogue, on Wednesday will honor former National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Dr. Anthony Fauci with an award for his lifelong devotion to public health and service.
Dr. Fauci will receive the Harvey Milk Chesed Award on May 7 at 7 p.m. in Cafritz Hall at the Edlavitch Jewish Community Center of Washington, D.C., at 1529 16th Street, N.W.
The award is given annually to someone who has made “outstanding” contributions to the LGBTQ+ and Jewish communities that “exemplify the virtue of chesed, or ‘lovingkindness.’” Fauci’s commitment to combating infectious diseases-HIV/AIDS, respiratory infections, diarrheal diseases, tuberculosis, malaria, Ebola, Zika, and COVID-19-as well as his leadership in public health policy, embodies this value, according to Bet Mishpachah President Joseph Pomper.
“Bet Mishpachah is honored to have this opportunity to recognize Dr. Fauci for his lifelong commitment to the health and well-being of millions of people around the world,” said Pomper. “As members of the LGBTQ+ community, we are especially thankful for his courage and dedication in the fight against HIV/AIDS. He stood with us at a time when our community was often shunned and stigmatized. Today, as members of our community are again under attack, his leadership in that crisis and throughout his career serves as a shining example of the spirit of chesed (lovingkindness) that we honor with this award.”
Following the presentation, Fauci will join his longtime friend and colleague Jeff Levi — emeritus professor at the Milken Institute School of Public Health at George Washington University and former deputy director of the White House Office of National AIDS Policy — for a conversation.
Fauci advised seven presidents on key health issues, most prominently HIV/AIDS, and helped create the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), which has saved more than 20 million lives globally.
The event is part of Bet Mishpachah’s 50th anniversary celebration. Registration is closed, but waitlist requests can be sent to [email protected].
District of Columbia
WorldPride permits for National Mall have yet to be approved
Organizers say application process is going according to plans

Less than two weeks before the first events of WorldPride 2025 in D.C. are scheduled to begin on May 17, the U.S. National Park Service has yet to officially approve the permits needed for what organizers say will be a small number of WorldPride events scheduled to take place on the National Mall and other federal park grounds.
In response to a request by the Washington Blade for information on the status of the permit applications, National Park Service Spokesperson Brian Hall said in a May 2 email only that at least one of the permits “is still being worked on and not final.”
Hall sent the Blade a chart showing what appeared to be five WorldPride events under consideration for a permit, with four of them set to take place on federal park grounds at or near the Lincoln Memorial.
Ashley Smith, president of Capital Pride Alliance, the nonprofit D.C. LGBTQ organization playing the lead role in organizing WorldPride 2025, said most of the several dozen WorldPride events expected to take place between May 17 and June 8 would be held at locations other than the National Mall and other federal spaces.
“There is really only a small number that we’re doing this with the National Park Service, because we’re not on a lot of federal land for everything,” he told the Blade. “But we have been in communication with them, and our team is consistently communicating with them,” Smith said.
Smith added, “We feel strongly that we will be able to move forward. I don’t believe there are major concerns with us not being able to move forward. We’re making sure we’re providing all the proper information we need to be successful.”
Some LGBTQ activists have expressed concern that the Trump administration, which has put in place policies hostile to the LGBTQ community, especially the trans community, might attempt to block the permits. But another National Park Service spokesperson said in a statement that the permit approval process does not take into consideration the political message of those applying for permits.
“Applications are approved provided no applications were previously submitted for the same dates and locations, and the organizers are able to ensure the preservation of park resources and the safety of all participants, park visitors, and community members,” according to NPS spokesperson Michael Litterst.
“It is a deliberate process that does not consider the content of the message presented,” Litterst added in a statement to the Blade last November after Trump’s election as president.
Sahand Miraminy, the Capital Pride Alliance director of operations, told the Blade in a statement that it is “customary” for the National Park Service to hold off on issuing a permit until about one week before an event is scheduled to begin.
“Oftentimes, this is also tied to the agency’s cost estimates for cleanup, turf restoration, and law enforcement reimbursements,” Miraminy said. “Typically, the National Park Service also has a policy of not sharing detailed event plans for applicants, and we certainly appreciate keeping our detailed event information secure, as it often pertains to the health and safety of our participants,” he said.
“We don’t believe it’s necessary to share with the broad public the exact permits we hold for our events as some reservations are tied to infrastructure and security measures,” Miraminy said, adding that the Capital Pride website is a “great resource” finding the numerous WorldPride events.
The website shows at least one leading event will take place on the National Mall: A June 8 International Rally and March for Freedom will begin on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial and travel from there to near the U.S. Capitol Building, the website states. It says participants in the march will then join the WorldPride Festival and Concert on Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. near the Capitol scheduled to take place June 7-8.
Vincent Slatt, an official with D.C.’s Rainbow History Project, is among the lead organizers of that organization’s WorldPride exhibition called “Pickets, Protests and Parades: The History of Gay Pride in Washington, D.C.” The exhibition, scheduled for May 17 through July 7, will be held in Freedom Plaza, the federal parklands site on Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., between 13th and 14th streets.
Slatt points out that Rainbow History Project has applied for its own National Park Service permit for the exhibition and, like Capital Pride Alliance, is still waiting for the permit’s approval.
“I can share great news,” Slatt said in a May 4 message to the Blade, “Rainbow History Project had our latest meeting with NPS this morning and she stated that we are on track to receive our permit. There are no problems expected.”
Slatt added, “As of this morning, our permit is only pending the finalized copy of our insurance and safety plan. These are things my board will vote to approve at our May meeting. Everything looks GREAT for RHP and our activity.”
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