27 states restrict trans participation in school sports in Washington

States are increasingly banning transgender athletes from school sports teams. This trend began in 2020 and has led to legal battles. The Supreme Court will now decide if 'sex' in Title IX refers only to biological sex or includes gender identity....

NYT News Service
FILE -- President Donald Trump with young female athletes as signs an executive order that barred transgender athletes from competing in girl's and women's athletics in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Feb. 5, 2025. The Supreme Court on Tuesday will hear a case that could affect laws in 27 states that bar transgender athletes from joining girls' and women's sports teams. (Eric Lee/The New York Times)
Before 2020, decisions about whether transgender athletes could compete on school sports teams in accordance with their gender identity were left to athletics associations in districts and states.

But over the past six years, 27 states enacted laws in rapid succession restricting their participation. Idaho, whose statute is being challenged before the Supreme Court, was the first, in March 2020. West Virginia, whose law is also now before the court, passed its version in 2021.

There is no authoritative count of trans athletes in school sports. During contentious hearings at statehouses across the country, sponsors of legislation often did not cite an instance in their own state or region where participation had caused a problem.


The wave of legislation came as the number of young people identifying as transgender was climbing, adding to a perception among many parents across the political spectrum that their own daughters might be placed at an unfair disadvantage. In a Gallup survey last spring, about two-thirds of adults said they believed that transgender athletes should be limited to teams that match their birth sex, including 4 in 10 Democrats.

The legislation was part of a strategy among conservative activists a few years after the Supreme Court made same-sex marriage a national right in 2015 to rally their base.

All the states that enacted restrictions had Republican-controlled legislatures. Two more, Alaska and Virginia, banned transgender participation through regulations or agency policies, according to the Movement Advancement Project, an LGBTQ+ advocacy group. Efforts in Congress to pass a national ban have failed.
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Last spring, Minnesota became the first state to sue the Justice Department over its threat to cut federal funding to states that allow transgender girls and women to participate on sports teams that correspond with their gender identity. The state argues that its own antidiscrimination statute requires that trans athletes be allowed to participate in sports.

Harmeet Dhillon, the head of the Justice Department's civil rights division, wrote in a letter to the state attorney general that the state's position "seemingly requires Minnesota schools to disregard the federal government's interpretation of Title IX," referring to the civil rights law that bars sex discrimination in schools, at issue in the West Virginia case.

The Supreme Court will address the question of whether the word "sex" under Title IX means only biological sex, as the Trump administration has argued, or whether it also includes gender identity. Its answer will likely shape the future for trans athletes across all states.
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