Elizabeth Warren had the time of her life marching at Las Vegas Pride parade

Elizabeth Warren marched in the 22nd annual PRIDE Night Parade on October 11 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo: Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
Elizabeth Warren marched in the 22nd annual PRIDE Night Parade on October 11 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo: Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

Itā€™s safe to say that Elizabeth Warren had the time of her life at the Las Vegas Pride parade.

Cloaked in a rainbow feather boa and posing for selfies with eager fans, the Massachusetts senator was the sole presidential candidate to appear at the Friday celebration of LGBT people, which continues throughout the weekend in downtown Vegas.

Waving to supporters and stopping for occasional hugs, Warren marched alongside drag artist Shea CouleĆ©, who rose to fame on RuPaulā€™s Drag Race, according to the Las Vegas Sun.

ā€œThese photos of Elizabeth Warren & Shea Coulee at Vegas Pride are everything I needed this morning,ā€ tweeted one person.

ā€œLooking good Madam President,ā€ one wrote on Facebook. Another said, ā€œLooking fancy with that boa!ā€

Sen. Elizabeth Warren and drag queen Shea Coulee march in the Southern Nevada Association of Pride Inc. 22nd annual PRIDE Night Parade in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
Sen. Elizabeth Warren and drag queen Shea Coulee march in the Southern Nevada Association of Pride Inc. 22nd annual PRIDE Night Parade in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

A longtime supporter of the LGBTQ+ community, Warren made a virtual surprise appearance at RuPaulā€™s DragCon NYC last month.

Warren was the only White House hopeful present at the festivities in Nevada, where the presidential nominating caucuses take place on Feb. 22.. But she was joined by several family members of nominees. Chasten Buttigieg, husband of Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg, was present, as was Jill Biden, the wife of former vice president Joe Biden.

Warrenā€™s appearance at the parade comes on the heels of the latest Democratic presidential town hall earlier this week, hosted by CNN and the Human Rights Campaign Foundation (HRC). Warren set the internet ablaze with her response to a question asked by Morgan Cox, chair of the Human Rights Campaign board of directors, about how she would respond to someone whose faith teaches them that ā€œmarriage is between one man and one woman.ā€

In her response, Warren said ā€œWell, Iā€™m going to assume itā€™s a guy who said that. And Iā€™m going to say, ā€œThen just marry one woman. Iā€™m cool with that...Assuming you can find one.ā€

Warren recently released a comprehensive plan for securing LGBTQ+ rights and equality, detailing how she would work to combat issues ranging from the HIV/AIDS epidemic and workplace discrimination to reducing the number of youth experiencing homelessness and caring for LGBTQ+ elders, one-third of whom are low-income.

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