Monday, June 8, 2026
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The Latest Gay News and World Events

I knew we Tucsonans are pretty proud of our fun little city, but there is a whole gay world out there full of amazing people and we should know a little about their lives.  With that in mind, I present to you the Gay News section; a few of my favorite news sources talking about Gay News and Events around the world.  Check back regularly for constantly updated news and information that truly matters.

LGBTQ Nation Gay News

LGBTQ Nation

The Most Followed LGBTQ News Source

Former U.S. Rep. Aaron Schock reportedly tried to mount a political comeback and aligned himself with anti-LGBTQ+ allies to do so.
The Department of Defense recently slashed the number of individual religious affiliations that military members can claim from 211 to 31.
Murry Foust's family is launching a scholarship in his name, "to honor their love of art.”
The judge found that putting women in men's prison puts them in danger.
Nevertheless, it's still part of a troubling trend.
Jean created a whopping 500 looks for "Cats: The Jellicle Ball."
Medical providers statewide have said that such exams are unnecessary and invasive.
She tore them apart for allegedly withholding information while demanding trans kids' medical records.
Companies that once boasted they were LGBTQ+ friendly are jettisoning their support to protect their bottom line.
Trump and the lesbian comedian have been public feuding since 2006.
The Guardian LGBT News Feed
The Guardian LGBT News Feed

LGBTQ+ rights | The Guardian

Latest news and features from theguardian.com, the world's leading liberal voice

Hot tubs and high camp as a TV star dripping in rhinestones tries to solve a real-life crime in this fabulously flawed murder mystery. Who cares who did it

Here is a camply craptastic murder mystery that aims to offer queer-minded fans of trashy detection stories a treat for Pride month with a manifestly cheap and cheerful, amusingly badly performed, diva-centric exercise. Let us be clear: this is not well-made in the slightest, with a script as shonky as a flatpack gateleg table, with similarly slapdash direction by collaborators Trent Garrett and Jacob Young. (Clearly it takes two people to make something this inept.) But its flaws somehow make it endearing, mostly because it stars Joan Collins, looking insanely fabulous at whatever free bus-pass-qualifying age she is.

Collins plays Francesca Carlyle, a famous TV detective lady, lacquered in rhinestones, and always in faintly softer focus than everyone else. She rents her mansion to a gang of old friends getting together for a European holiday in an indeterminate country; this early-middle-aged gaggle, who supposedly have known each other since university, is comprised of a mix of Americans such as bullish Josh (Young), his vampy, fake-eyelash-wearing wife Kat (Nadia Bjorlin), and slightly more modestly attired Sonia (India Thain). There are Brits like Sonia’s husband Devin (Simon Cotton), and newcomer Sydney (Toby-Alexander Smith) who just married the core group’s friend, ambiguously accented Louisa (Hana Vagnerová). One of the cohort is killed on the first night after some carousing, during which two of the above blokes grope each other on a stairway, overseen by a third, and hot tubs are deployed.

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Mama G wants to dedicate her book, The Proudest Bird in the World, to pair after chance Blackpool Pride encounter

A search is under way for two lesbian grandmothers who inspired a new children’s book after a chance encounter with a pantomime dame at Blackpool Pride.

The women, whose names are not known, attended a reading by the popular performer Mama G in 2021, complaining to her about the lack of diversity in young literature.

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CNN anchor Jake Tapper joined a chorus of voices accusing the former first lady of rewriting history and dodging accountability for the 2024 loss

Forget the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) fight being held on the White House lawn, if you want to tune in to a far more amusing brawl, may I suggest Hunter Biden v Jake Tapper? The CNN anchor is categorically unimpressed with Jill Biden’s new memoir, View from the East Wing, and has joined a chorus of voices accusing the former first lady of rewriting history and dodging accountability for the 2024 loss. In response, Hunter has accused Tapper of having the wrong priorities.

“So let me get this straight,” Hunter wrote on Twitter/X on Wednesday. “Jake Tapper is focused on attacking my Mom. Jared and Ivanka are building a private island paradise on Albanian protected land. Don Jr married the daughter of Epstein’s banker, and a startup his fund backs just got a record $620M Pentagon loan. Eric is taking an Israeli drone company public for $1.5B in the middle of a war with Iran that nobody wanted. And I know: ‘But what about your paintings, Hunter?’ Please.”

Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist

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Republican states rebrand June as ‘nuclear family month’ or ‘fidelity month’ in latest attack on LGBTQ+ communities

June is widely marked as gay Pride month – when LGBTQ+ communities march to protest discrimination and celebrate their identities in the month that the modern US gay liberation movement was born out of the 1969 uprising at New York’s Stonewall Inn – although not so much in certain Republican-led states this year.

Some Republican governors have suddenly come up with alternative labels for the month, which both supporters and opponents view as counterprogramming.

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Plus, Anne Hathaway shoots from the hip for Arsenal and Rosamund Pike calls out theatregoer for texting during show

The first day of Pride month and friends in New York report a textbook encounter between one of the straightest forces in this world – hen night energy – and one of the gayest, the Rocky Horror Show, currently in revival on Broadway, where for the past three months, Tony-nominated Luke Evans has been knocking it out of the park as Frank-N-Furter.

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Draft treaty claims sexual and reproductive health and rights are an existential threat to the African family

An African treaty that rejects longstanding international human rights obligations moved a step closer to becoming policy this week as governments across the continent met in Ghana.

The draft African charter on family, sovereignty and values, seen by the Guardian, asserts that African values and culture are under attack from “foreign ideologies” and urges states to withdraw from any agreements that do not align with the principles of the charter, including the 2003 Maputo protocol, which promotes gender equality and protects the reproductive and health rights of women and girls.

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  • Lions seek to help extend the reach of inclusive clubs

  • 78-page document is the first of its kind in football

Millwall have published a first-of-its-kind “Pride playbook” to help football clubs form stronger partnerships with LGBTQ+ teams across the country.

The move comes during Pride month as the Lions seek to build on the success of their teams, Millwall Romans and Millwall Pride, and help extend the reach of LGBTQ+ inclusive football amid growing demand.

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Poet, playwright and novelist who fought hard for gay rights and the welfare of her fellow authors

Asked last year what it felt like to be hailed as a pioneer, the writer and activist Maureen Duffy, who has died aged 92, replied: “It’s a funny old thing. I suppose I’ll get used to it.” Yet there could not have been a more deserving winner for the inaugural RSL Pioneer prize, set up by Bernardine Evaristo and the Royal Society of Literature to honour the achievements of British writers aged over 60.

The author of more than 60 works – spanning novels, non-fiction and poetry as well as dramas for theatre and TV – Duffy was also a campaigner for the rights of animals and of her fellow authors, to whom she was famously encouraging. Her presence at literary events, her blue eyes surveying the scene over a smart three-piece suit, attested to an equally dogged activism.

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New Gallup poll finds support for same-sex marriage and relationships in the US has stopped rising after two decades

Acceptance of same-sex marriage and relationships in the US has flattened after more than two decades of steadily increasing support, with an ongoing decline among Republicans, according to a new Gallup poll.

About 65% of US adults believe same-sex marriage should be legal, down slightly from 71% in 2022 and 2023.

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Even for nonbelievers like me, the pope has become a reassuring – and all too rare – voice of moral clarity

Do you remember the early 2000s, when Silicon Valley buzzed with idealism and tech bros told us they were going to save the world? “Don’t be evil” was Google’s unofficial motto; its 2004 IPO prospectus declared that doing “good things for the world” was more important than “short term gains”. Mark Zuckerberg similarly wrote in Facebook’s 2012 IPO letter that the social network was “built to accomplish a social mission – to make the world more open and connected”.

As was obvious to anyone paying attention, this was all performative bullshit. Nevertheless, it’s hard not to feel nostalgic about that period of time – which came to a definitive end in 2018, with the Cambridge Analytica scandal. By and large, billionaires and CEOs still cared what the hoi polloi thought of them. They were self-aware enough to realize that, even with all their billions, there’s a lot more of us than there are of them.

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Human Rights Watch Gay News

Human Rights Watch News

Click to expand Image An Egyptian intelligence security detail member stands guard near a banner showing President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. © 2021 Mahmud Hams/AFP via Getty Images

In a living-room-sized hall of a political party’s Cairo headquarters, family members of prisoners gathered around a photo exhibition on May 12. There, they shared grievances and called on Egyptian authorities to release their loved ones.

In the days that followed, the National Security Agency summoned several of the families for interrogation and detained a number of the event’s organizers. Three of the organizers—lawyers Wafaa el-Masry and Mohamed Abu el-Diar and activist Hanan Tantawy—were detained on May 25 and accused with “publishing false news,” provisions frequently used to silence and detain peaceful critics. While the Supreme State Security Prosecution released Tantawy and el-Masry on bail after lengthy interrogations, Abu el-Diar remains in detention and faces the additional charge of “joining a terrorist organization.”

While widespread and abusive detention has become one of the country’s most pressing human rights and political issues, affecting tens of thousands of families, the authorities’ apparent response has been more detentions. Examples are plenty.

On April 6, activist Ahmed Douma, who spent 10 years in prison and was released in 2023 pursuant to a presidential pardon, was re-arrested for writing an article on abusive detention conditions he witnessed. He was convicted and sentenced to one year in prison on June 3.

Authorities arrested Sayed Moshagheb, a former leader of the feared football ultras group, on April 16, just hours after he was released from 11 years in detention. Authorities reportedly used videos showing a small, spontaneous celebration in front of his home to charge Moshagheb and five of his acquaintances with obstructing a public road and rioting. They remain detained without trial.

Officials have offered meager, inconsistent initiatives aimed at addressing the crisis. Presidential pardons for some prisoners and public prosecution release orders for some who have spent years in detention without trial bring small measure of hope every now and then. However, these are exceptions to the norm: authorities arrest people—and even re-arrest some—on a near-daily basis as security services target the slightest forms of political dissent or social nonconformity, from journalists doing their job and human rights activists organizing to women dancing on TikTok.

Despite the government’s promises of reform, this vicious cycle continues, exacting a heavy toll on people’s safety and livelihoods amid the most prolonged human rights crisis in the country’s recent history.