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Pride flag reinstated at Stonewall after removal by Trump administration
Summary
Days after the Trump administration oversaw removal of a Pride flag from the Stonewall national monument, New York City officials raised the flag again at the site in Greenwich Village.
Content
New York City officials raised a Pride flag at the Stonewall national monument after it had been removed earlier by the Trump administration. The site near the Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village is linked to a 1969 uprising that helped shape the modern LGBTQ+ rights movement. Officials said the flag was taken down following a memo from the Interior Department that limited flags at parks to US flags, agency flags and the POW/MIA flag, with some exceptions for historical context. The National Park Service said the policy governing flag displays has been in place for decades.
Key facts:
- A large crowd gathered at the Stonewall site as city officials returned the Pride flag to the mast, where it now flies alongside the American flag.
- New York elected officials including Manhattan borough president Brad Hoylman-Sigal and US congressman Jerry Nadler participated in raising the flag and made public statements about the action.
- The removal prompted criticism from local leaders; the city mayor called it an "act of erasure" and the city council passed a resolution urging Congress to respect the history of Stonewall and other national sites.
- The Interior Department and an unnamed spokesperson described the reinstatement as a "political stunt" and said guidance clarifies longstanding policy on flag displays.
- The episode was reported alongside other recent National Park Service changes, including the removal of panels about enslavement from the President's House in Philadelphia, which officials have linked to an executive order.
Summary:
The reinstatement was a swift local response that drew attention to how federal flag policies are being applied at historic sites. Undetermined at this time.
