Pinkwashing refers to the deceptive marketing strategy of using superficial support for causes—specifically breast cancer awareness (using pink ribbons) or LGBTQ+ rights (rainbow-washing)—to improve a company or organization’s public image while downplaying or masking unethical practices, negative actions, or lack of genuine, substantive support for those communities.
That pinkwashing becomes even more apparent when organizations and corporations dropp support when it becomes “uncomfortable” in difficult times. It is a sign of a fair-weather corporate friend who’s more interested in your pocketbook than your pride.
In 2026, Gay Days Orlando, the iconic LGBTQ+ gathering in Florida, has been “paused“, marking a stark example of a broader corporate and organizational retreat from LGBTQ+ sponsorship and support. Organizers cited the loss of key sponsorships and mounting pressures on LGBTQ+ gatherings, underscoring a trend affecting Pride and LGBTQ+ visibility nationwide and internationally.
Gay Days, which began in 1991, is a week-long unofficial Pride event at Walt Disney World Resort, attracting tens of thousands annually. While never an official Disney event, it has symbolized LGBTQ+ inclusion in one of the world’s most high-profile tourist destinations. Its cancellation reflects how financial pressures and corporate risk-aversion can directly impact LGBTQ+ communities.
- Source: Yahoo News, Gay Days Orlando canceled
- Event history: Wikipedia, Gay Days at Walt Disney World
Contacts for concerns about Gay Days/Disney inclusivity:
- Gay Days Inc: Contact Form
- Disney Public Relations: DisneyParksPR@disney.com
- Universal Orlando PR: PR@universalorlando.com
Below is a clear list of companies and organizations that have recently rolled back LGBTQ+ support, dropped sponsorships of Pride or community events, or reduced public-facing inclusion policies based on reliable reporting, including what was changed and who you can contact to voice your concerns.
This is accurate as of early 2026. Sources link to reputable outlets when available.
Companies Reducing or Ending LGBTQ+ Support
| Company | What Was Dropped / Reduced | Contact | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anheuser‑Busch | Ended decades-long Pride sponsorship (St. Louis, San Francisco, Columbus) | equity@anheuser‑busch.com | Forbes |
| Booz Allen Hamilton | Dropped sponsorship of WorldPride Washington, D.C. | info@bah.com | Axios |
| Comcast | Withdrew from San Francisco Pride and other major Pride sponsorships | pr@comcast.com | The Guardian |
| Deloitte | Ended sponsorship of WorldPride Washington, D.C. | DeloittePress@deloitte.com | Axios |
| Diageo | Pulled out of San Francisco Pride sponsorship | diageo.global@diageo.com | The Guardian |
| Garnier (L’Oréal brand) | Pulled back funding from NYC Pride (platinum donor) | consumer.relations@loreal.com | Advocate.com |
| Lowe’s | Withdrew support from some Pride events | corporate@lowes.com | Advocate.com |
| Mastercard | Did not renew major NYC Pride sponsorship | media@mastercard.com | Axios |
| Nissan | Reduced or withdrew Pride sponsorship commitments | pr@nissan-global.com | Axios |
| PepsiCo | Withdrew or scaled back Pride support | PepsiCo_PR@pepsico.com | Axios |
| PricewaterhouseCoopers | Scaled back NYC Pride sponsorship | pwc.press@pwc.com | Advocate.com |
| Target | Scaled back DEI programs, reduced visible Pride sponsorships | media@target.com | Queer Tartan Register |
| Toyota | Ended sponsorship of cultural/parade events including Pride; scaled back HRC Corporate Equality Index participation | public_affairs@toyota.com | Queer Tartan Register |
| Walmart | Dropped some Pride Month sponsorships | media.relations@walmart.com | Queer Tartan Register |
| Citi | Scaled back NYC Pride sponsorship | CitiMedia@citi.com | Axios |
Events Reducing or Losing LGBTQ+ Support
| Event | What Was Dropped / Reduced | Contact | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gay Days Orlando (Disney/Universal) | 2026 event paused/canceled due to loss of sponsorships and mounting pressures on LGBTQ+ gatherings | Gay Days Inc: Contact Form; Disney PR: DisneyParksPR@disney.com; Universal Orlando PR: PR@universalorlando.com | Yahoo News |
| Local Pride events nationwide | Many local Pride organizations faced budget gaps due to withdrawn corporate sponsorship | Contact local Pride orgs | AP News |
| NYC Pride | Lost significant corporate sponsorship funding (Mastercard, PepsiCo, Nissan); budget shortfall | contact@nycpride.org | LGBTQ Nation |
| WorldPride Washington, D.C. 2025 | Lost sponsorship from Booz Allen Hamilton; other corporate pullbacks | info@worldpride.org | Axios |
Highlights for Advocacy
- Companies: Email the contacts to request continued or renewed LGBTQ+ support.
- Events: Support organizers through donations, volunteering, or public advocacy.
- Share this table on social media to raise awareness of sponsorship pullbacks.
Context and What This Actually Means
Most of these changes were reported in 2024–2025 in the U.S., tied to broader corporate scaling back of diversity, equity and inclusion programs. Changes ranged from ending sponsorships of major Pride events to stopping formal DEI initiatives or participation in the Human Rights Campaign’s Corporate Equality Index (a widely cited public measure of LGBTQ+ inclusion). (Reuters)
Some companies continue to claim they support inclusion internally, even as they scale back public programs. Others are explicit that they will no longer take part in culturally specific sponsorships. Press offices differ in how they explain the moves.
How to Contact These Companies Effectively
Here are practical steps to make your voice heard:
- Write short, direct emails to corporate public affairs or communications teams.
- Mention specific changes you are concerned about (for example: “ending sponsorship of Pride events”).
- Use your real name and location; civil messages are more likely to be read.
- Share why continued LGBTQ+ support matters to your community and customers.
- Ask for a public statement of support or a reversal of the change.
Here are common contact points for issues like this:
- Anheuser-Busch: equity@anheuser-busch.com
- Comcast: pr@comcast.com
- Diageo: diageo.global@diageo.com
- Target: media@target.com
- Tractor Supply Co.: ir@tractorsupply.com
- Toyota: public_affairs@toyota.com
- Walmart: media.relations@walmart.com
Most companies publish media or public affairs contact emails on their websites under “Contact Us” or “Media Center.”
Follow-Up Your Message
If you want your message to be heard more broadly:
- Post constructive feedback on LinkedIn or Twitter/X tagging the company.
- File a message with Human Rights Campaign’s Corporate Equality Index noting specific policy changes.
These actions create public documentation each company can’t ignore. (cnbc.com)













