
This year Portland DSA joined Portland’s Pride parade for the first time. We decided as a chapter that we wanted to show up at the annual event in solidarity with struggles for working-class queer and trans justice, and to give our members an opportunity to gather together, to march and to show the city what it is that we are fighting for, and not just what we are fighting against. As an organization we believe that the right of people to live their own lives, and to both love who they want and be who they desire, is paramount. In our daily organizing in the city of Portland, we affirm our debt to the struggles or queer and trans people throughout history, and we celebrate the legacy of queer organizers and activists who have fought for all forms of justice. Those organizers showed solidarity with people facing every kind of oppression and exploitation, from gender to sexuality, through race and ethnicity and national origin, to where all exploitation comes together in the fight for economic and class justice against the toxic priorities of the rich and their servants. The members of Portland DSA take inspiration from those struggles in our efforts to imagine and build a better world. This year we wanted to make that inspiration more public than we have in the past- and to show Portland that there are people out there willing to fight.



In the contemporary climate of political disaster, and with a triumphalist right-wing energy in full control of federal power, what is sorely lacking is any kind of coherent opposition. Everyone not part of the grim authoritarian structures of power feels that lack, as they watch the structures of civil society erode and see the marginal guarantees that this society has offered its citizens crumbling in front of them. People feel powerless in the face of cataclysm, and in large part that is because there seems to be nobody with any power who is willing to take the fight to where it is needed.The Democratic Party at both national and state levels has abdicated its role as opposition to the Trump administration, and has shown itself fully captured by the priorities of the rich. Unable to resist a galling complicity in the genocide of the Palestinian people, the Democratic establishment is drifting rudderless in the turmoil of a political system tearing itself apart. Nationally we see this in the failure of Democratic leaders to offer any resistance to the trashing of federal systems by Elon Musk’s DOGE, nor to the decimation of social services or the unleashing of a militarized deportation infrastructure intent on ethnically cleansing the nation. Locally it appears in the form of a Governor who seeks to overturn democratically won victories like Preschool For All, simply because the tax it levies on her rich friends forces them to acknowledge the debt they owe to this society. The fact that Governor Kotek identifies as queer shows that there is nothing inherently radical about the identities that Pride celebrates, and that without a commitment to justice across the spectrum, including economic justice, there is nothing truly progressive about queer people in power. The rich think they owe us nothing, and that they can wave concessions to queer and trans justice in front of us to get us to shut up, go away and go home. But we will never shut up. And we will never forget what they owe us. It was us, after all, who made them rich.




In the months leading up the event, the chapter’s Art Department organized several events to create a suite of visual tools to represent the organization in the Parade, with the goal of making the DSA presence at the parade one of the largest contingents. We used slogans that have been employed at the national level within DSA and in the struggles of our allies in the union movement (shoutout to Starbucks Workers United!) to create banners that read “Be Gay and Organize” and a stack of fifty screen-printed signs reading “No Trans Bans, No Abortion Bans, No Genocide”. Members printed the images on fabric, assembled the signs, and painted the banners- we also created 6 oversized cardboard and papermaché fists, painted in the rainbow colors of queer struggle.






On the day of the event we gathered at our assigned spot, and waited for our signal to start. We counted more than 120 members in our block, and as the parade got rolling three of the 4 DSA City Councilors showed up to jump in the bed of the small Kei truck leading the contingent- Tiffany Koyama Lane, Angelita Morillo, and Sameer Kanal were joined by Tammy Carpenter of the Beaverton School District, all members in good standing of the largest Socialist organization in the country (the fourth DSA councilor, Mitch Green, had to sit this one out with an injury).


We were loud, and we were large. We were one of the most numerous contingents in the parade, far outnumbering the Multnomah County Democrats; and as we marched, we chanted, and we yelled our commitment to justice for queer and trans lives, and for all the ways in which the fight for the future connects. We saw the crowd chanting with us as we passed along the street, waving our oversized fists and with DSA and Palestine flags fluttering overhead. “Gay Straight Trans Bi- all our hearts are Red Inside” “One Struggle, One Fight- Workers of the World Unite” and a surprise favorite celebrating the things that bottoms and tops can agree on. It was a joyful spectacle, and having our members who have been elected to city government leading the chants showed the crowds lining the avenue that there is in fact someone willing to stand up and fight for them, for us, for everyone. It is time for queer and trans justice, and it is time to get organized. The fight is on, and DSA is here to win it.
