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Mayoral candidate Christine Quinn regrets lack of LGBT presence in NY St. Patrick's Day parade

Thousands expected to descend on Manhattan for annual St. Patrick’s Day parade


With the American flag aloft the St. Patrick's Day parade in New York marches by the St. Patrick's Day Cathedral, on Fifth Avenue. The Irish parade continue to hold a ban on any LGBT representative groups marching in their ranks.
With the American flag aloft the St. Patrick's Day parade in New York marches by the St. Patrick's Day Cathedral, on Fifth Avenue. The Irish parade continue to hold a ban on any LGBT representative groups marching in their ranks.
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One of New York’s leading Irish American political figures has expressed her regret over the exclusion of LGBT groups from the annual St. Patrick’s Day parade.

City Council speaker Christine Quinn won't be marching in Saturday's St. Patrick's Day Parade. The Irish American is the leading Democratic mayoral candidate and could become the city’s first openly gay and first female mayor later this fall.

A granddaughter of Irish immigrants, she is saddened and mystified why LGBT groups cannot display their any gay-pride messages while marching in the famous Fifth Avenue parade.

"I've marched in Dublin (in its St. Patrick's Day parade) with visibly identifiable stickers and buttons that made clear we were both Irish and LGBT," she told the AP.

"If you can do that in Dublin, in God's name, why can't you do it on Fifth Avenue?"

Speaking in 2011, Irish Foreign Minister Eamon Gilmore  said he found the Fifth Avenue parade  at odds with “Irishness” due to its exclusion of LGBT communities.

“What these parades are about is a celebration of Ireland and Irishness. I think they need to celebrate Ireland as it is, not as people imagine it. Equality is very much the center of who we are in our identity in Ireland," the Minister said.

“This issue of exclusion is not Irish, let’s be clear about it. Exclusion is not an Irish thing. … I think that’s the message that needs to be driven home.”

Mayor Bloomberg, who is due to march in the parade and agrees that LGBT groups should be allowed to participate with their banners.

"My job as mayor nevertheless is to attend these parades, and I will continue to attend them – at the same time, while I am working as hard as I can to get the parade organizers to change," he said in 2011 .

Speaker Quinn and Mayor Bloomberg both marched in the 14th annual St. Pat's For All parade in Sunnyside, Queens earlier this month. This parade merits itself as being one of the most diverse in the city, embracing LGBT contingents, community groups, children's bands, Irish organizations and religious and civic groups, all in celebration of Ireland.


See more: Irish in US Politics , Irish Roots , St Patrick's Day , Irish in New York , Irish Traditions
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I haven'tattended a 17th o Marchevent in NYC for 15 years, but evry year I participate in the Menorial Day parade in the upstate community in which live. The unit with which I march is the lacal American Legionnaires. Several other contingents also participate in this parade, but we in the Legion post would NEVER permit any anti-military group to be part of our Memorial Day march.
Well said hooligan6a... @ Rebelforce: Nowhere in the Roman Catholic Church or in its teachings is there any condemnation of any persons who are of the LGBT “Brigade's" inclinations, AS PEOPLE. What is there, as in all other Christian Churches’ teachings, is rejection of their inhumane, unnatural towards one another, selfish-animalistic “bedroom” behaviour, as expounded by Apostle Paul in his Road to Damascus God-enlightened and Christ-based epistles and exhortations. There’s a ‘Big Diff’ in there! One more thing, though I hate to say it to some reading this post... God is the ultimate Judge... anyone who “proudly” wears a “badge of honour” in front of His Holy Merciful Spirit upon their death is likely to be... (You can all try finishing the sentence; I can’t. But maybe St. Paul would).
Rebelforce, its Americans excluding gay people. We Irish include everyone in ours. Gay, straight, Irish, migrant, whoever. Everyone is welcome to celebrate our national day in Ireland.
WELL IM SURE THERE WAS ALSO A HUGE LACK OF IRISH PEOPLE PRESENT HERE ALSO... MAINLY AMERICANS WHO THINK THEY ARE IRISH..AS AN IRISHMAN LIVING IN IRELAND .. IT MAKES ME JUST LAUGH EVERY YEAR WHEN I SEE THIS..
When people refer to parading Irish Protestants in Northern Ireland as pigheaded bigots because they can't tolerate anyone who happens to be Catholic, they where it as a badge of honor. Sadly, its the same mentality with some "good" Irish Catholics. They where their homophobic intolerance as a badge of honor. It's sad, but the good news is they are on the same side of history as those red-faced white southerners who screamed abuse at black schoolchildren who dared attend a white-only school.
The parade is about St Patrick, not who or what you are sleeping with.
 




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