LGBT Groups Protest Outside Senator Scott Brown's Office

by Diana Mai (Staff), May-27-10

BOSTON/Government Center - Last Friday, 40 people gathered in front of Senator Scott Brown's office in downtown Boston. The UMass Boston LGBT Equality Coalition, a group committed to advocating full equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer identified people, organized the rally as part of a larger national week of action in honor of Harvey Milk, the first openly gay politician elected to public office who was later assassinated.

Mass. LGBT Advocates Protest Yes Vote on Maine's Anti-Gay Marriage Question 1

by Jason Pramas (Staff), Nov-08-09

BOSTON/Boston Common - Immediately following the yes vote on Maine's Question 1, the "Maine Same-Sex Marriage People's Veto," over 100 Mass. gay marriage advocates held a protest on Boston Common next to the Park Street T stop on Wednesday evening. The question was put on the ballot by Stand for Marriage Maine - a coalition of conservative religious and social organizations - to overturn Maine's recently-passed gay marriage law. It was opposed by the progressive coalition Protect Maine Equality. Both the pro- and anti-Question 1 forces had significant support on the national and state levels during the closely watched campaign - which was widely viewed as a barometer of the prospects for the success of the gay marriage movement around the U.S.

Obama Protest Roundup

by David Goodman, Jesse Kirdahy-Scalia, Diana Mai and Jason Pramas (Staff), Oct-24-09

BOSTON and Cambridge, MA - What happens when a sitting President gives two speeches in your city in a single day? Well, if you live in Boston, you get two protests - one for each appearance by the Commander-in-Chief.


The action kicked off late Friday morning at MIT - where approximately 600 people gathered along Mass. Ave. in front of the Stratton Student Center. Nearby, inside Kresge Auditorium, Pres. Barack Obama spoke to a capacity crowd on US clean energy initiatives. Though the vast majority of the crowd gathered in the hopes of seeing Obama, over 60 people - most organized on short notice by the Boston area anti-war coalition United for Justice with Peace and the environmental organization Secure Green Future - held signs to protest the US occupation of Afghanistan, inaction on climate change, health care reform and foreign policy towards Iran, among other issues.