During the campaign, Vice President-elect Mike Pence at a rally at JWF Industries in Johnstown, Pennsylvania on October 6, 2016. (Photo by Jeff Swensen/Getty Images)

During the campaign, Vice President-elect Mike Pence at a rally at JWF Industries in Johnstown, Pennsylvania on October 6, 2016. (Photo by Jeff Swensen/Getty Images)

As Vice President-elect Mike Pence wraps up his time in the tony neighborhood of Chevy Chase, activists are heading to the area for another protest—this time with biodegradable glitter and their best dance moves in tow.

The groups WERK for Peace, which started a dozen person-strong dance party at the Capitol to fight against homophobia and in favor of stronger gun laws, and bedlam-seeking protest organizers DisruptJ20 are behind the Queer Dance Party at Mike Pence’s House.

“We are exercising our First Amendment right to express that we feel that homophobia and transphobia is wrong and should be resisted,” says Firas Nasr, a founding organizer of WERK for Peace. “Our use of dance is really about claiming space and asserting #WeAreHere and #WeWillDance.”

Pence’s record on gay and transgender rights—fighting gay marriage (even as an emergency exception), overseeing an explosion of HIV rates in one Indiana town after shutting down its Planned Parenthood, and signing a since-watered down law that allows businesses to discriminate against LGBT individuals in his state.

He was welcomed by his temporary Chevy Chase neighbors with rainbow flags and “Trust Women” signs.

Nasr says that the group will meet at 6 p.m. on Wednesday at the Friendship Heights Metro, with biodegradable glitter and rainbow paraphernalia like suspenders and glow sticks in tow. “We are planning to get as close as we can to his house,” he says, though declined to share the route they’ll take to get there.

He says that the dance “that really gets me moving is bootyshaking or twerking. I will definitely be twerking tomorrow for peace,” though he adds that, “because we want to be inclusive of all forms of dance, we welcome any body to come and join us in celebration, in movement, in whatever way they want.”