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Millions of people across the globe took to the streets to mark Pride celebrations over the weekend, with many defying ...
Photo: European Union/EP/Flickr Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has called the Pride march “repulsive and shameful” and accused the European Union (EU) of helping to organize it, Reuters reports ...
Pride parades continued in major U.S. cities and in Hungary, but corporate sponsors decreased amid growing opposition to ...
Orbán said the Hungarian government represented the majority position, which was that “LGBTQ propaganda should not be a part of our everyday life”, and that “instead we should protect our children, ...
These moves “undermine the international human rights system’s bulwark against authoritarianism,” PRA warns, aligning the U.S. with global anti-LGBTQ regimes like Hungary and Uganda. The ...
Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s effort to ban Pride backfired, drawing a huge throng in support of LGBTQ+ rights and hurting ...
Organizers say this year’s events are taking a more defiant stance than in previous years in the face of rollbacks of LGBTQ+ ...
Hundreds of thousands of people from across Europe (including Luxembourg) united in solidarity with the LGBTQ+ community ...
"This isn’t just about LGBQT+ rights, it's also about the right to assemble and about standing up for each other and not ...
Budapest Pride was banned by the Hungarian government. LGBTQ activist Kristof Steiner and his husband joined thousands to ...
Several countries, including Canada, Australia, and European nations, issued a statement supporting LGBT rights during Pride Day. The United States, under Trump, did not join this initiative, raising ...
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