Christian Vidaure, left, Darrell Hardaway, and Jasmine Haygood, right, perform during the 45th annual San Francisco Gay Pride parade Sunday, June 28, 2015, in San Francisco. A large turnout was expected for gay pride parades across the U.S. following the landmark Supreme Court ruling that said gay couples can marry anywhere in the country. (AP Photo/ Tony Avelar)

SAN FRANCISCO | A parade that at times resembled a rainbow-colored dance party snaked Sunday through downtown San Francisco, the centerpiece of a celebration of a freshly endorsed right to marry even as advocates look ahead to new frontiers in the struggle for equality.

Cheerleaders, dancers and proud families of lesbians and gays swooped up Market Street as spectators flocked 10 to 15 people deep along both sides. There were “Hooray for Gay” and “Love Won” signs. There were rainbow flags and knee socks, umbrellas and tutus.

SF Pride Board President Gary Virginia said the exuberance was amplified given last week’s U.S. Supreme Court ruling that same-sex couples can wed in all 50 states. Still, he said more needs to be done in housing and job discrimination in the United States and for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people around the world.

“Today, we celebrate,” Virginia said. “Tomorrow, we get back to work.”

Hundreds of thousands of people packed gay pride events from Chicago to New York City, Seattle to San Francisco, with overall attendance for events expected in the millions. In New York City, organizers expected about 22,000 people to march while in San Francisco, organizers put the number at 26,000.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo used his newly granted powers to officiate at the wedding ceremony of a same-sex couple in Manhattan. It was held in front of the Stonewall Inn, where in 1969 gay bar patrons stood up to a police raid, launching the modern gay rights movement.

Nikita Lowery, a 28-year-old resident of Chicago, said she decided to attend that city’s parade for the first time this year. “I feel like it’s a true celebration now,” she said.

At gay pride parades in Paris and other cities outside the U.S. on Saturday, the Supreme Court’s ruling was hailed by many as a watershed.

“Soon in all countries we will be able to marry,” said Celine Schlewitz, a 25-year-old nurse taking part in the Paris parade. “Finally a freedom for everyone.”

Street celebrations were boosted Saturday in Dublin, where Ireland mounted the biggest gay rights parade in the country’s history. But in Turkey, police used water cannons to clear a rally Sunday in Istanbul. It wasn’t clear why the police intervened in the peaceful rally. The crowd regrouped a few blocks away.

In San Francisco, police say a bystander was shot at a gay pride event at the city’s civic center Saturday when several men got into an argument unrelated to the celebration. A 64-year-old man was shot in the arm, and he is expected to survive, said Officer Carlos Manfredi on Sunday.

Dykes on Bikes traditionally kicks off the city’s Pride parade. Riders revved their engines for five minutes and received a sprinkling of silver glitter from a bystander before setting off at 10:30 a.m. to hoots and cheers and unbridled applause.

Corporate sponsors included home-sharing platform Airbnb, which had a float with dancers shimmying on a bed and in a bathtub. Apple sent a large contingent of people clad in white t-shirts.

Kelsey Brosler, a 17-year-old high school student from Concord, Calif., and mother Carlene Brosler, 45, were among the spectators. The younger Brosler, who recently came out as pansexual, said the Supreme Court decision was a long time coming.

“Definitely the fight is not over yet. I know everyone here is still fighting,” Kelsey said. “Even though it’s a very happy event, there’s still more to come.”

Associated Press writers Gregory Katz in London, Raphael Satter in Istanbul, Verena Dobnik in New York City and Sara Burnett in Chicago contributed to this report.

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4 replies on “Supreme Court ruling makes pride parades historic, jubilant”

  1. Marriage between a man and a woman was ordained by God and enshrined by nearly all societies around the world for the purpose of procreation and the raising of children, among many other reasons. The union of male and female is a matter of natural law.

    1. Too bad people decided to start bringing this “Natural Law” into the realm of actual law. Adding tax benefits to marriage and limiting the rights of surviving gay partners without it made this a legal necessity. Turns out you cannot have your cake and eat it too. Also the whole natural law argument is a joke, you cannot pick and chose what parts of the bible are “natural law.”

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