Conservative firebrand and rising GOP voice Karoline Leavitt is making headlines once againâthis time for taking direct aim at Pride Month, calling for it to be abolished and replaced with a national âVeterans Monthâ each June. In a fiery social media post that quickly went viral among both critics and supporters, the former Trump White House staffer didnât mince words.
âWe dedicate an entire month to sexual identityâbut only one day to the brave men and women who risked their lives for this country. Thatâs backward,â Leavitt declared.
 A Patriotic Pivotâor Political Provocation?
According to Leavitt, her proposal isnât about hateâitâs about âreclaiming our national valuesâ and refocusing public attention on what she describes as âthe real heroes of America: our veterans.â
âJune should be about honoring sacrifice, not celebrating sexuality,â she wrote. âOur military veterans deserve more than parades and hashtags. They deserve recognition, resources, and a month that belongs to them.â
Critics immediately accused Leavitt of using veterans as a political cudgel to undermine LGBTQ+ recognition and visibility. Progressives called the move a transparent culture war tactic, while LGBTQ+ rights groups labeled her rhetoric as divisive and erasing.
But Leavitt doubled down in a follow-up interview on a conservative podcast, claiming that Pride Month has become âa corporate circusâ and that Americans are âtired of being forced to celebrate ideologies they donât believe in.â
 Support from the Right

Leavittâs proposal gained traction among some Republican lawmakers and conservative influencers, with hashtags like #VeteransMonthNow and #HonorNotIdeology trending briefly on X (formerly Twitter). Several veterans themselves expressed support for the idea, saying they feel âneglected and tokenizedâ by the current national focus.
One retired Marine commented, âWe donât want to take anything away from others. But itâs trueâwe get one day. Why not a month?â
 Pushback from Pride Advocates

LGBTQ+ advocates argue that Pride Month serves a critical purpose in remembering historic struggles, especially the Stonewall Riots, and advancing equality in a country where anti-LGBTQ+ legislation is still being proposed and passed.
âPride is not about overshadowing veterans,â said one activist. âItâs about survival, visibility, and human rights. Thereâs room in our calendar for both.â

 Culture War Continues
With the 2024 election season still echoing into 2025, Leavittâs call to reframe June as Veterans Month fits into a broader trend of conservative cultural realignmentâchallenging corporate Pride campaigns, school policies on gender identity, and what they describe as the âprogressive monopoly on public discourse.â

Whether or not the proposal gains legislative traction, itâs clear that Karoline Leavitt is staking her brand on bold, headline-grabbing contrastsâand sheâs not backing down.
âItâs not hate to honor our heroes,â she said. âItâs patriotism.â