Donald Trump signed an executive order restricting people under the age of 19 from accessing medical treatments or procedures intended to help them undergo a gender transition.
The order, issued on January 28 and titled “Protecting Children from Chemical and Surgical Mutilation,” prohibits federal funds from being used to cover the cost of such treatments for minors.
The order also directs federal agencies to ensure that medical schools and hospitals receiving any research or education grants are not conducting research on — or providing minors with access to — gender-affirming treatments.
The order directs all federal agencies to rescind guidance from the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH), a nonprofit association that has adopted guidelines for how and when gender-affirming treatments are to be administered to transitioning individuals.
Critics of WPATH have claimed that the organization’s more recent guidelines were based on a political or ideological stance rather than on science.
Trump’s order asserts that “impressionable children” are being lied to and pushed to pursue transition-related treatments that will lead to sterilization and “lifelong medical complications.” It also claims that a large number of minors who do seek out gender-affirming treatments will eventually come to regret their decision to transition.
The order requires TRICARE (the Department of Defense’s insurance plan), Medicaid, and federal employee health insurance plans to refuse to cover the costs of gender-affirming treatments prescribed to minors.
It directs the Department of Justice to “prioritize investigations” of medical providers who “may be misleading the public about long-term side effects of chemical and surgical mutilation.”
Twenty-six states have passed laws restricting individuals under the age of 18 from accessing certain types of gender-affirming care. However, a recent study published in JAMA Pediatrics earlier this month found that less than 0.1% of adolescents with private insurance in the United States are transgender and have been prescribed either puberty blockers or hormone therapy.
And yet, Republican politicians have seized on anti-transgender sentiment as a cultural wedge they can use to rally voters to their side in elections.
Most major medical associations, including the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the American Psychological Association, have opposed state-level attempts to restrict access to gender-affirming care.
The Williams Institute, an LGBTQ policy think tank, estimates there are about 300,000 transgender youth aged 13 to 17 in the U.S. About one-third of them are believed to live in states with restrictions on gender-affirming care.
“Only eight days into his second term, President Donald Trump has blood on his hands,” Rodrigo Heng-Lehtinen, the executive director of Advocates for Trans Equality, said in a statement.
“This executive order not only prohibits but intends to set forth a path to potentially criminalize the provision of safe, evidence-based, medically necessary gender-affirming care, endangering the lives of tens of thousands of transgender adolescents under the age of 19.”
Heng-Lehtinen continued, “Denying trans youth medical care will not stop them from being trans. Our trans community survived long before the government ever recognized us.… Trans existence is unyielding, and we will endure.”
The Gender Research Advisory Council + Education (GRACE), a transgender advocacy group, accused Trump of bending to the will of conservative activists who authored Project 2025. The blueprint for conservative governance calls for eradicating LGBTQ legal protections and refusing to recognize transgender identity.
GRACE asserted that the executive order strips away the rights of parents, who previously had been allowed to make medical decisions for their children. It has also criticized the hypocrisy of Republicans, who frequently trumpet the idea of “parental rights” when it comes to educational curricula, and who were vehemently opposed to mask and vaccine mandates during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Our nation is witnessing firsthand the attempted eradication of people who are transgender,” GRACE Founder and President Alaina Kupec, said in a statement. “Our dehumanization by religious extremists is starkly similar to what took place in 1930s Germany.
“When our country’s leaders like President Trump and [House] Speaker [Mike] Johnson [R-La.] use the weight of the government to promote a radical agenda denying our existence, all Americans should stand up and take notice. It may start with the transgender community, but as history has proven, it will not stop with us.”
Sheriff's deputies accused Kalaya Morton of being a "man" due to her gender expression, demonstrating how cis women can be targeted by anti-trans restroom laws.
A Black 19-year-old cisgender lesbian from Phoenix says she was humiliated after Pima County Sheriff's deputies barged into a Walmart women's restroom in Tucson that she was using last month.
Kalaya Morton, who describes herself as a "stud," and is a masculine-presenting woman, says she believes the deputies were called by a store employee who assumed she was transgender.
Speaking with The Advocate, Morton said she had entered the store restroom on February 19, along with her ex-girlfriend, who had handed her a tampon, when two male deputies stormed in, shining flashlights into the stall where she was using the toilet. They demanded that she exit the restroom.
A transgender protester from Illinois was arrested for washing her hands in the women's bathroom at the Florida State Capitol.
But it wasn't because she was outed or reported to the police by another person.
Rather, she outed herself.
According to the Miami Herald, 20-year-old college student Marcy Rheintgen alerted Florida lawmakers of her intention to use the women's restroom in protest of the state's 2023 transgender bathroom ban, which prohibits transgender individuals from using bathrooms matching their gender identity in public buildings, universities, schools, public parks, or correctional institutions.
West Virginia Republican Gov. Patrick Morrisey signed a bill that effectively erases the existence of transgender people from state law.
Surrounded by anti-trans advocates, Morrisey signed the "Riley Gaines Act" -- named after the former collegiate swimmer-turned-anti-LGBTQ activist -- into law.
The law defines the terms "man" and "woman" based on a person's biological anatomy at the time of birth in the state code.
For all legal purposes, the state will not recognize the gender of any person who identifies outside of the gender binary or identifies as a gender that does not align with their assigned sex at birth.
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