Irish Catholics may be getting ready to celebrate Saint Patrick’s Day, but one of the country’s biggest parades in one of the most liberal states in the country is banning gay veterans from marching.
The sponsor of Boston’s parade, the South Boston Allied War Veterans’ Council, has rejected an application by gay rights group MassEquality to allow twenty LGBT service members to participate in the annual parade. Boston Mayor Martin Walsh said Thursday he would make one more pitch to the Council, but the organizers claim that the vets will only be allowed to march if they do not reference their sexual orientation. “It is our intention to keep this parade a family friendly event,” the group wrote. “We will not allow any group to damage the integrity of the historic event — or our reputation as a safe and fun filled day for all.”
Because of the group’s conception of “family friendly,” the parade’s main sponsor, the Boston Beer Company, brewer of Sam Adams, has also backed out. According to the brewery, it is hopeful that “both sides of this issue would be able to come to an agreement that would allow everyone, regardless of orientation to participate in the parade. However, given the current status of the negotiations, we realize this may not be possible.” Mayor Walsh, for his part, has said he will not participate in the parade if the dispute cannot be settled.









