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Midwesterners celebrated Pride Month amid heightened anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric, new laws

Revelers at the 2023 Des Moines Pride Parade, which featured floats from dozens of area businesses.
Madeleine C King
/
IPR
Revelers at the 2023 Des Moines Pride Parade, which featured floats from dozens of area businesses.

In the first half of 2023, statehouses across the Midwest were once again battlegrounds over legislation directly affecting LGBTQ+ communities.

Nebraska passed a law banning transgender youth from receiving gender-affirming healthcare. So did Iowa and Missouri. After failing to pass in 2022, a ban on transgender students participating in school sports made it to the Missouri governor’s desk in 2023.

The Kansas governor vetoed two measures aimed at transgender people: One would have put in place a definition for biological sex. The other would have penalized doctors who perform gender reassignment surgery on minors.

On July 1, a new Kansas law defining an individual’s gender based on their biological sex assigned at birth goes into effect.

And yet, Pride Month events and celebrations seemed as popular and enthusiastic as ever.

Pride Month 2023

 Molly Monk joins the a crowd gathered for the Iowa City Pride Festival on June 17, 2023.
Em Domingues
Molly Monk joins the a crowd gathered for the Iowa City Pride Festival on June 17, 2023.

Supporters watch Des Moines' Pride Parade pass from private residences.
Madeleine C King
Supporters watch Des Moines' Pride Parade pass from private residences.

Nikki Love prepares to go on stage at the Des Moines Arts Festival's drag show.
Madeleine C King
/
IPR
Nikki Love prepares to go on stage at the Des Moines Arts Festival's drag show.

 A child walks with the Bessame Wellness in the Kansas City Pride Community Alliance’s KC Pride parade.
Savannah Hawley-Bates
/
KCUR 89.3
A child walks with the Bessame Wellness in the Kansas City Pride Community Alliance’s KC Pride parade.

 A troupe of dancers in yellow, orange and red in the Kansas City Pride Community Alliance’s KC Pride parade, which stretched from Westport to Frank A. Theis Park on June 13, 2023.
Savannah Hawley-Bates
/
KCUR 89.3
A troupe of dancers in yellow, orange and red in the Kansas City Pride Community Alliance’s KC Pride parade, which stretched from Westport to Frank A. Theis Park on June 13, 2023.

Multiple generations walked in the Kansas City Pride Community Alliance’s KC Pride parade.
Savannah Hawley-Bates
/
KCUR 89.3
Multiple generations walked in the Kansas City Pride Community Alliance’s KC Pride parade.

Adrienne Small, 26, of St. Ann, belts out a scream as 2023 Queen of Pride Analyse Thropic takes the stage on Saturday, June 24, 2023, during St. Louis PrideFest in downtown St. Louis.
Brian Munoz
/
St. Louis Public Radio
Adrienne Small, 26, of St. Ann, belts out a scream as 2023 Queen of Pride Analyse Thropic takes the stage on Saturday, June 24, 2023, during St. Louis PrideFest in downtown St. Louis.

Ariana Gibson, right, and her son Kai, 3, play in the puddles caused by water streaming from a fire truck on Saturday, June 24, 2023 at St. Louis Pride Fest in downtown St. Louis. “I’m bisexual and I have been around LGBT-everything my entire life,” Gibson said. “It’s a fun place to be.”
Tristen Rouse
/
St. Louis Public Radio
Ariana Gibson, right, and her son Kai, 3, play in the puddles caused by water streaming from a fire truck on Saturday, June 24, 2023 at St. Louis Pride Fest in downtown St. Louis. “I’m bisexual and I have been around LGBT-everything my entire life,” Gibson said. “It’s a fun place to be.”

Professor Courtney East and student Chelsea Koehn of Doane University at Star City Pride in Lincoln. Humidity, heat and possible storms didn't stop attendees from attending the first day of the city's Pride festivities on Friday, June 9.
Liz McCue
Professor Courtney East and student Chelsea Koehn of Doane University at Star City Pride in Lincoln. Humidity, heat and possible storms didn't stop attendees from attending the first day of the city's Pride festivities on Friday, June 9.

 Sapahn, an ethical luxury leather handbags and accessories company in Lincoln, shows its pride.
Lauryn Higgins
Sapahn, an ethical luxury leather handbags and accessories company in Lincoln, shows its pride.

“We wanted to bring human rights to the fashion industry by taking something that is often made in an unbeautiful way and making it beautiful,” said Brooke Mullen. Mullen is the owner of Sapahn, an ethical luxury leather handbags and accessories company in Lincoln.
Lauryn Higgins
“We wanted to bring human rights to the fashion industry by taking something that is often made in an unbeautiful way and making it beautiful,” said Brooke Mullen. Mullen is the owner of Sapahn, an ethical luxury leather handbags and accessories company in Lincoln.

Sophia Lewis, 13, of Maryland Heights, helps hoist a giant rainbow flag down Market Street on Sunday, June 25, 2023, St. Louis PrideFest in downtown St. Louis.
Brian Munoz
/
St. Louis Public Radio
Sophia Lewis, 13, of Maryland Heights, helps hoist a giant rainbow flag down Market Street on Sunday, June 25, 2023, St. Louis PrideFest in downtown St. Louis.

Copyright 2023 KCUR 89.3

Holly Edgell is the managing editor of the Midwest Newsroom, a public radio collaboration among NPR member stations in Missouri, Kansas, Iowa and Nebraska.