Canada In 2012,
Jason Kenney, Canada's Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, was accused of pinkwashing, after an email titled "LGBT Refugees from Iran" was sent to thousands of Canadians. The message contained additional recent comments by
John Baird, Minister of Foreign Affairs, about Canada's stand against the persecution and marginalization of gays and lesbian women around the world. A group of activists claimed that it "is a poor attempt at 'pinkwashing' the Conservative government's obvious desire to encourage war with Iran".
Belgium The Flemish nationalist party
Vlaams Belang and
Filip Dewinter shifted their stance on gay issues in the 2010s and began using pro-gay rhetoric to criticize Muslims and immigrants. According to Eric Louis Russell, Dewinter exploits homophobic violence in a similar way that pornography commodifies women's bodies; he argues "that this type of commodification of potential or real violence directed toward members of a society for political ends is a real, albeit
subjacent and deeply insidious form of homophobia".
France The French government frames LGBTQ rights as emblematic of "French values", contrasting France with supposedly "uncivilized" countries while deflecting attention from domestic social unrest. Simultaneously, the far right exploits similar rhetoric to attract gay voters and legitimize anti-Muslim and racist hate speech. While France legalized same-sex marriage in 2013, the scale of the homophobic backlash was massive, violent, long-lasting and supported by prominent figures within the
National Rally. Statistics from the 2013-2025 period indicate a sustained increase in hate crimes targeting sexual orientation.
Marine Le Pen, president of the French
far-right political party National Rally, was gaining support from LGBTQ communities in the presidential election, despite the fact that
Jean-Marie Le Pen, her father and the founder of the party, once condemned homosexuality as "a biological and social anomaly". Critics point out that while the National Rally claims to "protect gay people from Muslims", the party still aligns with ultra-conservative Catholic movements and international leaders, like
Viktor Orbán who are hostile to LGBTQ rights. Pro-Israel writers also argue that the term is not always applied to other countries that use similar strategies.
Ido Aharoni, former head of the
Brand Israel project, responded to such criticism, saying: "We are not trying to hide the conflict, but broaden the conversation." According to Atshan, "the critiques leveled against [anti-pinkwashing activists] are often not well founded or ethically deployed. It is particularly disconcerting when supporters of Israel instead cast Israeli state sources of victimization as saviors of queer Palestinians." He also argues that anti-pinkwashing can go too far when activists prioritize the struggle against
Israeli occupation and only bring up LGBTQ issues to criticize Israel. After the 2011
Gaza Freedom Flotilla, an Israeli actor created a hoax video in which he pretended to have been turned away from the flotilla because he was gay. The video was promoted by the Israeli prime minister's office.
Joseph Massad, associate professor of modern Arab politics and intellectual history at
Columbia University, has written that the Israeli government "insist[s] on advertising and exaggerating its recent record on LGBT rights ... to fend off international condemnation of its violations of the rights of the Palestinian people". Culture studies academic Nada Elia calls pinkwashing "the twenty-first century manifestation of the Zionist colonialist narrative of bringing civilization to an otherwise backwards land". During the
Gaza war, queer Palestinians argued that Pride and the Pride flag had been co-opted by a pro-Israeli group to justify and celebrate much of the resulting
Gaza humanitarian crisis. Many
queer pro-Palestinian activists advocated against the war, disrupting some
Pride parades in 2024. Scholars such as Jasbir Puar situate pinkwashing within the broader framework of homonationalism, arguing that states selectively deploy LGBTQ+ rights to portray themselves as progressive while legitimizing racialized, colonial, or militarized violence. Critical journalists have documented how Israel incorporates LGBTQ+ visibility into public diplomacy, such as through Pride-themed tourism campaigns, government-sponsored social media, and international cultural events to promote an image of tolerance that obscures the ongoing occupation of Palestinian territories. During global events like Eurovision 2019 and Tel Aviv Pride, Israeli ministries highlighted LGBTQ+ inclusion as a symbol of modernity. Queer Palestinian organizations such as alQaws and Adalah have challenged these narratives, emphasizing that LGBTQ+ Palestinians experience Israeli homophobia alongside structural forms of state violence, displacement, and occupation. These groups have also criticized pinkwashing campaigns for erasing queer Palestinian political agency, particularly during the 2023–2024 Gaza war, when Pride symbols were used by pro-Israel groups to justify or normalize the humanitarian crisis. Scholars note that such examples illustrate how pinkwashing functions not only as a public relations strategy but also as a geopolitical practice that shapes global understandings of queerness, nationalism, and colonial power.
Malta The Maltese government's internationally lauded pro-LGBTQ stance has been criticized as a form of pinkwashing - a deliberate strategy to divert attention from ongoing human rights violations and systemic failures in other areas of governance. These include the assassination of journalist
Daphne Caruana Galizia, suppression of
free speech,
widespread corruption, and
highly restrictive abortion laws. Malta has continuously ranked first on the
ILGA-Europe Rainbow Index since 2015, coinciding with a time when perceptions of corruption worsened. During the lead-up to his
2013 election,
Joseph Muscat gave an interview in which he stated that same-sex marriage was "unnatural" and that marriage should only be between a man and a woman. However, at the height of the March 2016
Panama Papers scandal - which revealed that Muscat's chief of staff,
Keith Schembri, and senior minister
Konrad Mizzi had set up a complex web of secret offshore companies, Muscat suddenly changed his stance, claiming that he was "in favor of same-sex marriage" and that "it’s time to debate the issue". When parliament voted in favor of
same-sex marriage in July 2017, the government projected a rainbow flag onto
Castille, with the words "We made history" displayed across the building - an image the government has since showcased online during every major scandal. Meanwhile, an investigation by The Shift News into Labour's secret online hate groups - which had more than 60,000 members and were managed by government and Labour officials - uncovered thousands of violently homophobic and transphobic comments. These included derogatory terms like "pufti" (poofters) and offensive descriptions of gay and trans individuals as "disgusting," as well as insults aimed at government critics and opposition politicians.
Nepal Nepal's government, supported by some activists, media, and lobby groups, has effectively marketed the country as a "beacon of LGBT rights". However, critics argue this campaign is more focused on financial and reputational gains than on advancing genuine LGBTQ rights. While the government projects a progressive image abroad, it has faced criticism for making little progress in areas such as anti-discrimination laws, hate crime protections, and same-sex marriage rights. This focus on international image continues to overshadow the government's failure to address pressing domestic issues including severe air pollution, widespread illiteracy, caste discrimination, corruption, unemployment, child exploitation, child marriage, violence against women,
witch hunts and
animal cruelty.
Sweden A coalition organized by several popular grassroots movements in Europe, including the
English Defence League (EDL), mounted
counter-jihad demonstrations in conjunction with LGBTQ Pride Week celebrations in Helsinki and Stockholm in July and August 2012. However, these movements inspired a counter demonstration by an LGBTQ rights group called "Queers against Pinkwashing", which claimed that the counter-jihad march against
Muslims was a clear example of pinkwashing and projected a fake support image for sexual minorities. In an interview for Radio Sweden,
Lisa Bjurwald, a Swedish journalist and expert on European
right-wing ideology, criticized the EDL for allying with the wrong people, as "Queers against Pinkwashing" are in fact against singling out Islam as if it were the source of all the relevant problems, because such attempts do not benefit the LGBTQ community. == Corporate marketing ==