Utah joined Arkansas in endorsing Fidelity Month, a movement promoted by conservative scholar Robert George. Arkansas is celebrating the month in June. The initiative urges Americans to rededicate …
Utah Gov. Spencer Cox declared June 2026 “Fidelity Month,” calling for a return to America’s “core values,” as Republican-led states across the country issue various proclamations in reaction to “Pride Month” celebrations.
Utah joined Arkansas in endorsing Fidelity Month, a movement promoted by conservative scholar Robert George. The initiative urges Americans to rededicate themselves to principles of God, marriage, family, country and community.
Cox’s announcement comes amid differing June declarations — and after his shift on whether to recognize Pride Month.
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This year, Tennessee, Alabama and Indiana proclaimed June as “Nuclear Family Month,” underscoring the role of traditional families. Oklahoma declared June “Life Month,” committing to support unborn humans from conception.
Democratic states continued to recognize June as “LGBTQ Pride Month,” accompanied by parades and rainbow decorations. President Bill Clinton made the occasion official in 1999, before Barack Obama expanded it in 2009.
The Trump administration, meanwhile, announced for the second year that June will be known as “Title IX Month,” referring to the 1972 civil rights law banning discrimination in publicly funded schools on the basis of biological sex.
The contest over the month of June reflects decadeslong culture war questions, exacerbated by partisan polarization and a sense that red and blue states increasingly represent different values ahead of America’s 250th anniversary.
What is Fidelity Month?
As governor of the Beehive State, Cox has changed his Pride Month messaging considerably since entering office. In 2021, 2022 and 2023, Cox made Utah one of the only GOP-leaning states to officially recognize “LGBTQ+ Pride Month.”
Gov. Spencer Cox speaks during a press conference on the last day of the legislative session in the Capitol’s Gold Room in Salt Lake City on Friday, March 6, 2026. | Tess Crowley, Deseret News
But in 2024, ahead of a competitive primary election in June, Cox stated his past declarations had “turned into a lightning rod for more division and hurt.” The governor, instead, declared June “a month of bridge building.”
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Last year, Cox did not issue a declaration at all. He posted that he was taking the month of June to reflect “on the values that bring us together.” He once again encouraged Utahns to “keep building bridges of understanding.”
In his latest change, Cox has chosen to highlight Fidelity Month for 2026 with a declaration referring to recent polls showing a dramatic drop among Americans in patriotism, religiosity, childbearing and community involvement.
Cox’s declaration defines fidelity as “dedication to faith, family and country.” Founding fathers like John Adams believed the U.S. Constitution was made for a “moral and religious people” committed to these values, Cox said.
“(T)he survival of the United States depends on the shared bonds of faith, family and patriotism,” the declaration states. “(I)t is fitting to observe one month each year to rededicate the United States to its core values.”
Is Pride Month inclusive or divisive?
Utahns gather to celebrate Pride Month during the Pride Parade as it passes through downtown in Salt Lake City on Sunday, June 2, 2024. | Marielle Scott, Deseret News
Marina Lowe, the senior director of legal and legislative affairs at the LGBTQ advocacy group Equality Utah, said she takes issue with the implication that Pride Month stands in contrast to values such as faith, family and marriage.
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“I think it’s just the reality that LGBTQ people are people of faith, are people of family, just like any other group of individuals,” Lowe said. “I don’t think that these positions need to be in conflict with one another.”
Pride Month is about “love, acceptance and inclusion,” Lowe told the Deseret News, adding that she believes strong families are defined by “stability and love and commitment,” not by a concept of traditional “nuclear” family structures.
However, other Utahns, like Skyler Sorensen, are glad to see pro-family messages coming from state leaders.
Sorensen is a content creator who focuses on the importance of traditional family values as a Latter-day Saint with same-sex attraction. He said Pride Month represents “a very specific goal” of removing “sexual norms” in public.
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“These aren’t just aberrations to the movement; they are very much central to the movement,” Sorensen said. “I don’t think it’s appropriate for our government to adopt that and push it out as if it’s something that’s politically neutral.”
June declarations don’t have to become a tit-for-tat that “feeds into political divisiveness,” he told the Deseret News.
Instead of fighting over the month before America’s 250th birthday, Sorensen said leaders can follow the Founders by respecting the right of conscience, while remembering the values of God, family and country that hold us all together.
The American flag and a Pride flag fly outside the City and County Building in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, June 4, 2025. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News
Editor’s note: This story had been updated to reflect a temporary change in the timing of Utah’s declaration, but it has since reverted to its original form.
Source: Utah News

