NATIONAL NEWS

As World Pride flows straight into the military parade, DC officials say they’re ready for anything

Jun 6, 2025, 9:48 AM

Workers put up fencing around Dupont Circle ahead of the World Pride Parade, Friday, June 6, 2025, ...

Workers put up fencing around Dupont Circle ahead of the World Pride Parade, Friday, June 6, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)
Credit: ASSOCIATED PRESS

(AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Officials in the nation’s capital generally express full confidence in their ability to handle large, complicated events and huge crowds. As Metropolitan Police Department Chief Pamela Smith recently put it, “We are really the experts in this space when it comes to crowd management.”

Over the next eight days. in the sprawling city that is the nation’s capital, that expertise will be put to the test.

The District of Columbia is playing host to massive events on back-to-back weekends. Two wildly divergent events each carry the extra possibility of counterprotests or disruption, adding a layer of anxiety to the usual logistical hassles.

June 7 and 8 brings the peak of the two-week World Pride celebration with two days of mass gatherings — a parade on Saturday and a rally and protest March Sunday. Both days culminate in a covering a multi-block stretch of Pennsylvania Avenue.

Then as cleanup from World Pride wraps up, preparations will begin for the much-hyped June 14 military parade to celebrate the 250th birthday of the U.S. Army (and the 79th birthday of a certain White House resident).

And while D.C. officials can claim they have seen it all before in terms of mass events, June 14 will present some genuinely unique challenges — actual 60-ton M1 Abrams battle tanks and Paladin self-propelled howitzers rolling through the city streets.

The cost of potential repairs is a concern

D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, who has gone out of her way to stay on the good side of President Donald Trump, has not disguised her discomfort at the prospect of armored vehicles chewing up the downtown asphalt. And she is still openly leery, despite assurances from the military that it will cover the costs of all repairs, and a plan to install protective plates at intersections.

“I think that there has been time and attention paid to how to move this heavy equipment in a way that doesn’t hurt (roads),” Bowser said last week. “I remain concerned about it. If they are rendered unusable, we have to make them usable and then go seek our money from the feds.”

For each of these high-profile weekends, police and security officials are on alert for any sort of counterprotest or attempts to disrupt the proceedings. Trump’s campaign against transgender protections and oft-stated antipathy for drag shows have fueled fears of violence against World Pride participants; at one point earlier this spring, rumors circulated that the Proud Boys were planning to disrupt this weekend’s celebrations.

Those fears have proven to be unfounded so far, although one last week. With those fears in mind, organizers will install security fencing around the entire two-day street party.

“We wanted to provide some extra safety measures (based on) concerns from some people in the community,” said Ryan Bos, executive director of the Capital Pride Alliance.

The bi-annual World Pride has, in the past, drawn as many as 1 million visitors to its host city. It remains to be seen just how large the final influx will be for the nation’s capital. Early hotel reservation numbers had indicated that attendance would be down somewhat, a possible result of international participants staying away out of either fear of harassment or in protest of Trump’s policies.

But Elliott Ferguson, president of Destination D.C. — which tracks hotel reservations — told reporters last week they were witnessing “a surge at the last minute” of people coming in for the final World Pride weekend.

Protests planned for military parade

The military parade, meanwhile, is expected to draw as many as 200,000 people, according to Army estimates. A large counterprotest against Trump — dubbed the rally — will march down 16th Street to within sight of the White House but isn’t expected to get close enough to the military parade to disrupt things.

Lindsey Appiah, the deputy mayor for public safety, acknowledges that longstanding plans for the Army’s 250th birthday “got a lot bigger on short notice” when Trump got involved.

“You have to be very flexible, very nimble. Things change and you have plans and then those plans change,” she said. “I think we’ve really learned to do that.”

Appiah points out an example of the District’s capabilities from early this year, when the city hosted the congressional certification of Trump’s electoral win, the state funeral for former President Jimmy Carter and then Trump’s inauguration on Jan. 20 — all in the span of two weeks and in the midst of a huge winter storm.

D.C. officials also point out that the logistical challenge facing the capital city doesn’t actually end on June 14. The military parade will be followed by three matches for the starting on June 18 and running through June 26, which will then roll straight into preparations for the traditional July 4 fireworks extravaganza.

Clint Osborn, head of the city’s Homeland Security and Emergency Management Agency, said the summer planning schedule “feels like Super Bowl after Super Bowl after Super Bowl.”

National News

Associated Press

Federal judge approves $2.8B settlement, paving way for US colleges to pay athletes millions

A federal judge signed off on arguably the biggest change in the history of college sports on Friday, clearing the way for schools to begin paying their athletes millions of dollars as soon as next month as the multibillion-dollar industry shreds the last vestiges of the amateur model that defined it for more than a […]

1 hour ago

In this long exposure zoom lens effect, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt speaks with re...

Associated Press

Appeals court hands AP an incremental loss in its attempt to regain its access to Trump events

Digging deep into free-speech precedents in recent American history, a federal appeals panel handed The Associated Press an incremental loss on Friday in its continuing battle with the Trump administration over access by its journalists to cover presidential events. By a 2-1 margin, judges on the three-judge U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington granted Trump […]

2 hours ago

President Donald Trump arrives on Air Force One at Morristown Municipal Airport in Morristown, N.J....

Associated Press

Judge says administration can dismantle the Institute of Museum and Library Services

WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge on Friday denied a request by the American Library Association to halt the Trump administration’s further dismantling of an agency that funds and promotes libraries across the country, saying that recent court decisions suggested his court lacked jurisdiction to hear the matter. U.S. District Judge Richard Leon had previously […]

3 hours ago

Associated Press

Jurors have convicted a Minnesota man of killing 5 young woman in a 2023 vehicle crash

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A state court jury convicted a Minneapolis-area man Friday of third-degree murder and vehicular homicide in the deaths of five young women in a crash that authorities said was caused by him speeding, running a red light and slamming into their car. Jurors in Hennepin County District Court deliberated two days before […]

3 hours ago

FILE - The Supreme Court is seen on Capitol Hill in Washington, Dec. 17, 2024. (AP Photo/J. Scott A...

Associated Press

Supreme Court rejects Republican bid to bar some provisional ballots in Pennsylvania

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court has rejected a Republican appeal and left in place a Pennsylvania court decision allowing people to cast provisional ballots when their mail-in votes are rejected for not following technical procedures in state law. The court released the decision Friday, after an “apparent software malfunction” sent out early notifications about […]

4 hours ago

A man stands outside a business where federal immigration authorities conducted an operation on Fri...

Associated Press

Immigration authorities carry out enforcement activity across Los Angeles amid crowds of protesters

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Federal immigration authorities carried out enforcement activities at several locations in Los Angeles on Friday, with some clashes breaking out as crowds gathered outside a warehouse and other locations across the city to protest the activity. Federal law enforcement officials were present at a Home Depot, an apartment complex, federal courts […]

4 hours ago

As World Pride flows straight into the military parade, DC officials say they’re ready for anything