Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 20
UK Community Pride Events Draw 6,000 as Smaller Gatherings Gain Ground
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 20

UK Community Pride Events Draw 6,000 as Smaller Gatherings Gain Ground

1 articles · Updated · BBC.com · Jun 20

Summary

  • Three UK Pride events in Cleckheaton, Glasgow and Salford highlighted rising demand for smaller, community-led alternatives to major parades, even as some mainstream celebrations are cancelled or scaled back.
  • Around 6,000 people attended Salford's Pink Picnic, but organisers said the 15th-anniversary event still faced acute financial strain, with costs above £100,000, ticketing introduced last year and sponsorship support weakening.
  • In Glasgow, about 25 people joined an LGBTQ+ ecology walk designed for those alienated by crowds, nightlife or poor accessibility; one wheelchair user said the public-park setting let her fully participate.
  • Cleckheaton's third annual Pride was described by organisers as its biggest yet, while attendees and performers said the small-town event offered a vital safe space amid discrimination incidents and uncertainty over support from Reform-led councils.

Insights

Are queer ecology tours and picnics the new face of Pride, replacing massive parades for good?
Amid council defunding and corporate flight, can grassroots Pride events find new, sustainable models to survive?