For those weary of Pride Month, take heart: In vast swaths of the country, the month of June is undergoing a refresh.
In Alabama, June is now Strong Families Month. In Arkansas and Utah, it’s Fidelity Month. The official designation in Indiana and Tennessee is Nuclear Family Month.
In addition to the red states, the Trump administration is marking Title IX Month for the second year in a row, honoring the federal law signed June 23, 1972, that bans sex discrimination in education.
“Throughout the month of June, we’re spotlighting the critical civil rights protections that women fought for decades to secure and the Trump administration’s vigorous commitment to protecting Title IX’s promise for current and future generations of women and girls,” said Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights Kimberly Richey in her June 1 announcement.
She didn’t mention Pride Month, but the message was clear. Instead of enduring Pride, Republicans and conservatives are pushing back, seeking to shift the celebration to traditional family values instead of the LGBTQ movement.
Going a step further was Rep. Mary Miller, Illinois Republican, who introduced a resolution designating June as Family Month – and declaring that the House “no longer recognizes Pride Month.”
“By recognizing June as Family Month, we reject the lie of ‘Pride’ and instead honor God’s timeless and perfect design,” she said in a June 3 statement. “If we truly want to restore our nation, we must stand united to protect and uphold the foundation upon which it was built — the family.”
Resisting the re-namings are LGBTQ advocates who want conservatives to pick another month.
“Establish Fidelity Month in, who knows, August or September or January, whatever, whenever,” said Gordon Monson, columnist for the Salt Lake Tribune, in a June 9 op-ed.
“But don’t use it as a giant eraser or as a counter-movement, as some kind of simultaneous stamp and statement to diminish or divert from what so many in the past and present have sought and seek to make clear: That they are human, they are valuable to society, they deserve equality and respect and, even absent of agreement, they deserve understanding,” he said.
As far as critics are concerned, however, it’s possible to recognize that LGBTQ people “deserve equality and respect” without being bombarded with drag story hours, adult-themed gay pride parades, rainbow logos, and stores packed with Pride Month merchandise.
“Increasingly, Americans see Pride parades not merely as expressions of tolerance but as demonstrations of cultural influence reaching into every corner of society,” said Tony Perkins, president of the conservative Family Research Council, in a June 5 op-ed.
He said that “concerns over gender identity policies involving children became the point at which broader questions about sexuality, marriage, parental rights, and cultural authority converged.”
Pride Month loses luster
The spate of June re-namings offer evidence that support for Pride Month may have peaked, a trend that includes corporate America.
Companies are pulling back on their Pride Month products, sponsorships and messaging, a decline accelerated by the 2023 Bud Light debacle, when Anheuser-Busch saw its market share plummet after partnering with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney.
Target cut back its Pride merchandise after a 2023 backlash over its “tuck-friendly” bikini for biological males who identify as female. Other companies including PepsiCo, MasterCard and Walmart have scaled back their support for events.
“Just a few years ago, rainbow logos and Pride products seemed ubiquitous among companies, even across industries,” said Jack Walker, a Future of Queer Media Fellow, in a June 5 article in Out magazine. “But as public opinion declines around LGBTQ+ rights and the LGBTQ+ community faces political attacks nationwide, many companies have retreated from once outspoken support for their queer customers.”
The publication cheered brands that continue to wave their Pride flag, including Levi’s, REI and Hot Topic.
Some sports franchises have also pivoted on Pride. The NHL banned specialty on-ice jerseys in 2023 after some players refused to wear Pride Month rainbow gear. Nine NFL teams did not post Pride Month messages on June 1, according to OutKick.
Meanwhile, the Texas Rangers maintained its status as the only MLB franchise that does not host a Pride Night, a stance the club has taken for years. The team does host a Faith & Family Night.
In this case, politicians and corporations may be following the trend, not setting it.
The annual Gallup Values and Beliefs survey released last week found that support for same-sex marriage and relationships has dropped since reaching an all-time high in 2022.
The poll found that Americans who believe same-sex marriage should be valid fell from 71% in 2022 to 65% in 2026, while those who agree same-sex relationships are “morally acceptable” declined from 71% to 62%.
In 2021, 46% of Americans polled said that changing one’s gender was “morally acceptable,” a figure that fell this year to 38%.
“For about two decades, Americans grew more accepting of LGBTQ+ people and more supportive of their civil rights,” said the poll in its June 4 analysis. “However, those pro-LGBTQ+ attitudes peaked about five years ago and have since edged downward, mostly among Republicans.”
Pride Month received federal recognition in 1999 when President Bill Clinton issued an executive order declaring June as Gay and Lesbian Pride Month, a tradition kept up by Democratic presidents, including President Joseph R. Biden.
President Trump has not issued Pride Month proclamations. Shortly after he took office, the State Department released its “One Flag Policy” listing the flags that may be flown outside U.S. embassies. The order does not include the rainbow Pride flag.

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