Supreme Court 🏛️ allows Tennessee BAN 🔞🏳️‍⚧️ on gender-affirming care for minors, big loss for transgender rights nation-wide 📉 (6-3 vote)

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Supreme Court OKs Tennessee ban on gender-affirming care for minors, big loss for transgender rights
The Supreme Court is seen on Capitol Hill in Washington, Dec. 17, 2024. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld Tennessee’s ban on gender-affirming care for transgender minors, a stunning setback to transgender rights.

The justices’ 6-3 decision
in a case from Tennessee effectively protects from legal challenges many efforts by President Donald Trump’s Republican administration and state governments to roll back protections for transgender people. Another 26 states have laws similar to the one in Tennessee.

The decision comes amid a range of other federal and state efforts to regulate the lives of transgender people, including which sports competitions they can join and which bathrooms they can use. In April, President Donald Trump’s administration sued Maine for not complying with the government’s push to ban transgender athletes in girls sports.

The Republican president also has sought to block federal spending on gender-affirming medical care for those under age 19 — instead promoting talk therapy only to treat young transgender people. In addition, the Supreme Court has allowed him to kick transgender service members out of the military, even as court battles continue. The president also signed another order to define the sexes as only male and female.

Trump’s administration has also called for using only therapy, not broader health measures, to treat transgender youths.

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The justices acted a month after the United Kingdom’s top court delivered a setback to transgender rights, ruling unanimously that the U.K. Equality Act means trans women can be excluded from some groups and single-sex spaces, such as changing rooms, homeless shelters, swimming areas and medical or counseling services provided only to women.

Five years ago, the Supreme Court ruled that transgender people, as well as gay and lesbian people, are protected by a landmark federal civil rights law that prohibits sex discrimination in the workplace. That decision is not affected by Wednesday’s ruling.

But the justices on Wednesday declined to apply the same sort of analysis the court used in 2020 when it found that “sex plays an unmistakable role” in employers’ decisions to punish transgender people for traits and behavior they otherwise tolerate.

There are about 300,000 people between the ages of 13 and 17 and 1.3 million adults who identify as transgender in the United States, according to the Williams Institute at the UCLA School of Law. The Williams Institute is a think tank that researches sexual orientation and gender identity demographics to inform laws and public policy decisions.

When the case was argued in December, then-President Joe Biden’s Democratic administration and families of transgender adolescents had called on the high court to strike down the Tennessee ban as unlawful sex discrimination and protect the constitutional rights of vulnerable Americans.

They argued that the law violates the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment, which requires the government to treat similarly situated people the same.

Tennessee’s law bans puberty blockers and hormone treatments for transgender minors, but it allows the same drugs to be used for other purposes.

Soon after Trump took office, the Justice Department told the court that its position had changed.

A major issue in the case was the appropriate level of scrutiny courts should apply to such laws.

The lowest level is known as rational basis review, and almost every law looked at that way is ultimately upheld. Indeed, the federal appeals court in Cincinnati that allowed the Tennessee law to be enforced held that lawmakers acted rationally to regulate medical procedures, well within their authority.

The appeals court reversed a trial court that employed a higher level of review, heightened scrutiny, which applies in cases of sex discrimination. Under this more searching examination, the state must identify an important objective and show that the law helps accomplish it.

___

Follow the AP’s coverage of the U.S. Supreme Court at U.S. Supreme Court | Latest Updates.
 
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Supreme Court upholds Tennessee ban on transgender youth medical care
Summarize
The ruling is a major setback for transgender rights, with more than 20 states enacting laws similar to that of Tennessee.

June 18, 2025, 10:15 AM EDT / Updated June 18, 2025, 10:22 AM EDT
A transgender rights supporter protests outside of the Supreme Court on Dec. 4, 2024.
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld a Tennessee law restricting gender transition care for minors, delivering a major blow to transgender rights.

The 6-3 ruling is likely to have a broad impact as 24 other states have already enacted laws similar to the one in Tennessee, which bars gender transition surgery, puberty blockers and hormone therapy.

The court was divided on ideological lines, with the six conservatives in the majority and the three liberals in dissent.

Those laws now look set to survive similar legal challenges. The ruling does not affect states that do not have such bans, meaning care in those states will still be available.

The court in an opinion authored by Chief Justice John Roberts concluded that the Tennessee law does not constitute a form of sex discrimination that would violate the Constitution's 14th Amendment.

"This case carries with it the weight of fierce scientific and policy debates about the safety, efficacy, and propriety of medical treatments in an evolving field," Roberts wrote. "The voices in these debates raise sincere concerns; the implications for all are profound."

"The Equal Protection Clause does not resolve these disagreements," he added.

Trans rights activists have also warned that a ruling allowing bans on care for trans minors could pave the way for similar restrictions aimed at adults.

The legal challenge was brought by the administration of former President Joe Biden, as well as transgender teens and their families.

The ruling does not definitely resolve all legal issues relating to the state bans as it did not address a separate argument under the 14th Amendment that the laws violate the right of parents to make health care decisions for their children.

Upon taking office in January, President Donald Trump has set about unwinding Biden policies that sought to bolster transgender rights. Among other things, he signed an executive order seeking to restrict gender-affirming care for teens nationwide. A judge quickly blocked it.

Trump has also imposed new restrictions on transgender people serving in the military.

Enacted in 2023, the Tennessee law is among a wave of similar measures taken by states imposing restrictions on gender transition treatments. In defending its ban, the state's lawyers pointed to similar measures taken in other countries, including in Europe.

Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti emphasized in court papers the evolving debate over how best to treat minors diagnosed with gender dysphoria, the clinical term given to the distress people can experience when their gender identities are in conflict with the genders assigned to them at birth.

Major medical organizations say gender-affirming treatments are an effective way to treat gender dysphoria.

The challengers argued that the law is a form of sex discrimination that violates the 14th Amendment's equal protection clause because the treatments at issue in the case — puberty blockers and hormone therapy — can be used in other situations.

The case marks the most significant ruling on transgender rights since the court in 2020, to the surprise of many, ruled that federal employment protections extend to gender identity as well as sexual orientation.

The dispute reached the Supreme Court after the Cincinnati-based 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2023 rejected challenges to the Tennessee law and a similar measure in Kentucky.
 

VertigoKnight

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Lbgtq was to heavy in they bag these past couple years. The push back wad always gonna be this way.

I feel like most people didn’t agree and was scared to say that the shyt was stupid.

I feel like black people were the only ones who said it was stupid as fukk loudly


Lesbians and Gays took years to win more people over to their side. It wasn't until the 90s that they slowly started to see gains. But they'd been at it a long long time.

Transwomen have ruined things in less than a few years.

Way more abrasive, unwilling to take baby steps, to win public approval, add to the fact that many of them like to 'cancel' people and yeah, they turned off a lot of people who could have been allies.

Culture wars are in overdrive. And the pushback was always going to be harsh, and they won't win people back. Even lesbians and gays are furious at them.

You can also see how they have pushed to have their own spaces free from trans people. Lesbians, especially, have been freaked out by this.
 

Doobie Doo

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Lbgtq was to heavy in they bag these past couple years. The push back wad always gonna be this way.

I feel like most people didn’t agree and was scared to say that the shyt was stupid.

I feel like black people were the only ones who said it was stupid as fukk loudly
Nah, maybe on the Internet cuz I saw plenty of nikkas defending this bullchyt from Simone Biles to Dwad to whomever had money and was famous and wanted to keep it.
 

Gloxina

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Lesbians and Gays took years to win more people over to their side. It wasn't until the 90s that they slowly started to see gains. But they'd been at it a long long time.

Transwomen have ruined things in less than a few years.

Way more abrasive, unwilling to take baby steps, to win
public approval, add to the fact that many of them like to 'cancel' people and yeah, they turned off a lot of people who could have been allies.

Culture wars are in overdrive. And the pushback was always going to be harsh, and they won't win people back. Even lesbians and gays are furious at them.

You can also see how they have pushed to have their own spaces free from trans people. Lesbians, especially, have been freaked out by this.
This is because they are men.

They bum rushed their way into women’s spaces/discussions, and women aren’t going to fight. So they’ve been continuing with the brashness and now men are shutting it down
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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Lbgtq was to heavy in they bag these past couple years. The push back wad always gonna be this way.

I feel like most people didn’t agree and was scared to say that the shyt was stupid.

I feel like black people were the only ones who said it was stupid as fukk loudly
they went after the kids. Everyone said…NOPE.
 

The Phoenix

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Again- don’t care what adults do and most certainly wish we had Harris in office, but I don’t think minors should be transitioning. All that should start at 18.
Same here. I will admit ignorance on a whole swath of trans subjects, but I just don't understand why this has to be done to minors. Especially pre-pubescent ones. Let that shyt wait until you're a fully grown adult and then transition all you want.
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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Lesbians and Gays took years to win more people over to their side. It wasn't until the 90s that they slowly started to see gains. But they'd been at it a long long time.

Transwomen have ruined things in less than a few years.

Way more abrasive, unwilling to take baby steps, to win public approval, add to the fact that many of them like to 'cancel' people and yeah, they turned off a lot of people who could have been allies.

Culture wars are in overdrive. And the pushback was always going to be harsh, and they won't win people back. Even lesbians and gays are furious at them.

You can also see how they have pushed to have their own spaces free from trans people. Lesbians, especially, have been freaked out by this.
It’s a different right. Gays wanted the private right to just marriage protections like insurance access, finances, power of attorney, etc.

They were already cohabitating etc.

Trans issues are trying to twist reality and going through tortured logic and emotional hostage taking of irrational unscientific talking points. Trans activists were trying to get you to call an axe 🪓 the same thing as a wrench 🔧 and getting mad if you raised any questions about it and threatened to impose legal consequences on you for doing so.

Trans activists wanted access to do things “non-trans/cis” people COULD NOT do

“trans women” wanted to use women’s bathrooms, access to women’s sports, scholarships, healthcare etc.

Enough is enough. We tried to be nice to these professional costume designers but we’re done with it.
 
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