Trump's DOJ Withdraws Opposition to Law Banning Trans Care for Minors
"The Department has now determined that SB1 does not deny equal protection on account of sex or any other characteristic," a top lawyer in the U.S. solicitor general's office told the U.S. Supreme Court Friday.
February 07, 2025 at 02:49 PM
4 minute read
The Department of Justice told the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday that the federal government no longer opposes a Tennessee law banning gender affirming care for minors following the change in administration, switching sides in this term’s blockbuster clash between Republican state laws and LGBTQ rights.
President Donald Trump's DOJ announced the change of position in U.S. v. Jonathan Skrmetti, Attorney General of Tennessee with a letter to the court signed by Deputy Solicitor General Curtis E. Gannon.
In Skrmetti, the DOJ under former President Joe Biden had successfully petitioned the court to consider a constitutional challenge to the state statute, SB1, barring medical staff from providing puberty blockers and hormone therapy to trans minors. The law, the past administration argued, constitutes illegal sex discrimination under the Constitution's Equal Protection Clause.
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