The Mercury News

Pride parades draw huge crowds.

- By Sabrina Caserta and Rebecca Gibian

NEW YORK » Exuberant crowds carrying rainbow colors filled New York City streets Sunday for one of the largest pride parades in the history of the gayrights movement, a dazzling celebratio­n of the 50th anniversar­y of the infamous police raid on the Stonewall Inn.

Marchers and onlookers took over much of midtown Manhattan with a procession that lasted hours and paid tribute to the uprising that began at the tavern when patrons resisted officers on June 28, 1969. The parade in New York and others like it across the nation concluded a month of events marking the anniversar­y.

Eraina Clay, 63, of suburban New Rochelle came to celebrate a half-century of fighting for equality.

“I think that we should be able to say we’ve been here for so long, and so many people are gay that everybody should be able to have the chance to enjoy their lives and be who they are,” Clay said. “I have a family. I raised kids. I’m just like everybody else.”

Alyssa Christians­on, 29, of New York City was topless, wearing just sparkly pasties and boy shorts underwear. A Pride flag was tied around her neck like a cape.

“I’ve been to the Pride parade before, but this is the first year I kind of wanted to dress up and get into it,” she said.

Christians­on said she was concerned that the movement could suffer setbacks during the Trump administra­tion, which has moved to revoke newly won health care protection­s for transgende­r people, restrict their presence in the military and withdraw federal guidance that trans students should be able to use bathrooms of their choice.

“I’m definitely a little scared of how things are going, just the anger and violence that comes out of it and just the tone of conversati­on about it. We’ve come so far, especially in the last few decades, that I don’t want to see that repressed in any way.”

In May, President Donald Trump tweeted about Pride Month and praised the “outstandin­g contributi­ons” of LGBT people. But his administra­tion has aligned with some religious conservati­ves in arguing that nondiscrim­ination protection­s for those same people can infringe on the religious beliefs of others who oppose same-sex marriage and transgende­r rights.

Earlier in the day, a crowd of about 2,000 people gathered outside the Stonewall Inn. At the Queer Liberation March near the bar, some participan­ts said the larger Pride parade had become too commercial­ized and heavily policed.

“What’s important to remember is that this is a protest against the monetizati­on of the Pride parade, against the police brutality of our community, against the poor treatment of sections of our community, of black and brown folk, of immigrants,” said Jake Seller, a 24-year-old Indiana native who now lives in Brooklyn and worked as one of the march’s volunteers.

Protesters carried antiTrump and queer liberation signs, chanting, “Whose streets? Our streets!”

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 ?? CRAIG RUTTLE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, lower front center, joins people participat­ing in the LBGTQ pride march in Manhattan on Sunday.
CRAIG RUTTLE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, lower front center, joins people participat­ing in the LBGTQ pride march in Manhattan on Sunday.

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