06/02/2026
We are so grateful for the show of support and love that we experienced in community yesterday at the 14th Annual LGBTQ+ Pride Flag Raising at Seattle City Hall.
Special thanks to Mayor Katie B. Wilson Seattle City Council Seattle Office for Civil Rights and all those who make our city a safe and welcoming place to call home. The Seattle LGBTQ Commission looks forward to working with our partners at the City and in the community to continue advocating for the rights and protections that we all deserve.
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Comments from Co-Chair Jessa Davis follow:
Good afternoon,
I’d like to thank the Mayor, members of City Council, and our special guests for being here today. My name is Jessa Davis, my pronouns are she/her, and I serve as Co-Chair of the Seattle LGBTQ Commission. It is truly an honor to stand with you today as we raise the Pride flag over our city.
Every year, this moment carries deep meaning for me personally: As someone who moved to Seattle to find a place where I could belong, I – like so many others here – understand that visibility itself is never a neutral act. And we know that raising this flag isn’t a trivial thing, because in some parts of this country what we’re doing right now is illegal.
As we are witnessing an unprecedented wave of backlash across the US targeting 2SLGBTQIA+ people, hundreds of bills attacking transgender, gender nonconforming, and Two Spirit people have been introduced to restrict our healthcare, limit participation in public life, censor education, and erase legal recognition. Despite the claims made to the contrary by those who are pushing this agenda, these are deliberate efforts to make it harder for people to live safely, openly, and with dignity.
And as a result, people are being forced to leave their homes. Not because they want to, but because the alternative is too dangerous. This is policy-driven displacement: It involves families asking whether their child can access appropriate care. It means individuals deciding whether they can remain employed, housed, or if they can even legally exist in public as themselves. And in some places, these oppressive policies carry the threat of prison, often for the simple act of having the audacity to be seen. So, many of those individuals are arriving in places like Seattle for safety.
We proudly call ourselves a Welcoming City, which is a standard that we have set for ourselves. It’s a commitment that requires our policies, our services, and our communities reflect the values we claim to hold. That means ensuring access to housing, healthcare, employment, and legal protections. It means resourcing the organizations already on the frontlines. And it means defending and strengthening the protections that make this city a place where people can truly live and belong.
Pride has always been about celebration and resistance. It is both joyful acceptance of oneself and a fierce declaration of belonging: An assertion that we will not accept policies rooted in fear or bigotry. And a declarative statement that we will continue to build a city where everyone has the ability to thrive.
So today, as we raise this flag, we do so with clarity: We affirm our values and make a commitment to every person who looks to this city for safety, for dignity, and for belonging—that Seattle will stand firm. Not just in what we say. But in what we do for our neighbors now and every day.
Thank you.
Jessa Gavrielle Davis (she/her), Co-Chair, Seattle LGBTQ Commission