• In 2004, more than 7,000 people participated in the March of Pride. For the first time, a "Pride Fair" was held in the
Plaza de Mayo during the event. • In 2007, approximately 25,000 people marched from the Plaza de Mayo to the National Congress. The closing ceremony was conducted by Argentine radio host and writer
Daisy May Queen. • In 2008, approximately 50,000 people participated in the march. The theme was
Voten nuestras leyes ("Vote for our laws"), in reference to the proposed legislation to protect
same-sex marriage and
gender identity which had become stagnant in the National Congress, as well as the prospect of overturning the laws which criminalized homosexuality in 10 provinces of Argentina. Toward the end of the event, members of the crowd were heard booing the
Vatican (which had recently spoken out against
sexual diversity) and
Mauricio Macri (the
Mayor of Buenos Aires at the time). • On 6 November 2010, the March of Pride celebrated the legalization of
same-sex marriage in Argentina. An estimated 100,000 people participated. Marchers and organizers also advocated for the passage of the
Gender Identity Law. • On 5 November 2011, the March of Pride once again advocated for the passage of the
Gender Identity Law. The theme of the march was
Ley de Identidad de Género ya ("Gender Identity Law Now"). Approximately 250,000 people participated. • On 10 November 2012, the theme of the March of Pride was
Educación en la Diversidad para crecer en Igualdad ("Education in Diversity to grow in Equality"). • On 15 November 2014, the theme of the March of Pride was P
or mas igualdad real: ley anti discriminatoria y estado laico ("For more real equality: Anti-Discrimination Law and the Secular State"). • On 7 November 2015, the theme of the March of Pride was
Ley anti discriminatoria ya ("
Anti-discrimination law now"). • On 26 November 2016, organizers repeated the theme from the previous year:
Ley anti discriminatoria ya ("Anti-discrimination law now"). • On 18 November 2017, the theme of the March of Pride was
Basta de femicidios a travestis, transexuales y transgeneros. Basta de violencia institucional. Orgullo para defender los derechos conquistados. ("Enough of the femicide of transvestites, transsexuals and transgenders. Enough of the institutional violence. Pride for defending our conquered rights.") • On 17 November 2018, the theme of the March of Pride was
Basta de genocidio trans/travesti. No al ajuste, la violencia y la discriminación. Macri y la Iglesia son anti-derechos. ("Enough of trans/transvestite genocide. No to
austerity, violence and discrimination. Macri and the Church are anti-rights.") • On 2 November 2019, the theme of the March of Pride was
Por un país sin violencia institucional ni religiosa. Basta de crímenes de odio. ("For a country without institutional or religious violence. Enough of the hate crimes.") • In 2020, in-person events for the March of Pride were canceled due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. Alternate events were hosted online. • On 6 November 2021, the theme of the march was
Ley Integral Trans ¡Ya!. ("Comprehensive trans law, now!") • On 5 November 2022, the theme of the march was
La Deuda es con Nosotres. Ley Integral Trans. Ley Antidiscriminatoria. Sí al Lenguaje Inclusivo. ("The debt is with us. Comprehensive trans law. Anti-discriminatory law. Yes to inclusive language"), referring to Argentina's debt with the
International Monetary Fund. • On 4 November 2023, the theme of the march was
Ni un ajuste más, ni un derecho menos ¡Ley Antidiscriminatoria, Ley Integral Trans Ya! ¡Frenemos a les Antiderechos!. ("Not a single budget cut more, not a single right less. Anti-discriminatory law, comprehensive trans law now! Let's stop anti-rights!") Due to the rise of
Javier Milei (major right wing politician) on voting polls. • On 3 November 2024, the theme of the March of Pride was
No hay libertad sin derechos ni políticas públicas. No hay libertad con ajuste y represión. ("There is no freedom without rights and public policies. There is no freedom with budget cuts and repression.") The use of the concept of "freedom" alluded to Javier Milei's party,
La Libertad Avanza. == See also ==