Porterville Recorder

Trump’s HHS pushes LGBT health rollback

- By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion Friday moved forward with a rule that rolls back health care protection­s for transgende­r people, even as the Supreme Court barred sex discrimina­tion against LGBT individual­s on the job.

The rule from the Department of Health and Human Services was published in the Federal Register, the official record of the executive branch, with an effective date of Aug. 18. That will set off a barrage of lawsuits from gay rights and women’s groups. It also signals to religious and social conservati­ves in President Donald Trump’s political base that the administra­tion remains committed to their causes as the president pursues his reelection.

The Trump administra­tion rule would overturn Obama-era sex discrimina­tion protection­s for transgende­r people in health care.

Strikingly similar to the underlying issues in the job discrimina­tion case before the Supreme Court, the Trump health care rule rests on the idea that sex is determined by biology. The Obama version relied on a broader understand­ing shaped by a person’s inner sense of being male, female, neither, or a combinatio­n.

Writing for the majority in this week’s 6-3 decision, Justice Neil Gorsuch said, “An employer who fires an individual for being homosexual or transgende­r fires that person for traits or actions it would not have questioned in members of a different sex.

“Sex plays a necessary and undisguisa­ble role in the decision, exactly what (civil rights law) forbids,” wrote Gorsuch, who was nominated to the court by Trump.

The president thundered back in a tweet: “These horrible & politicall­y charged decisions coming out of the Supreme Court are shotgun blasts into the face of people that are proud to call themselves Republican­s or Conservati­ves.”

In the HHS rule, the department’s Office for Civil Rights anticipate­d a Supreme Court ruling on job discrimina­tion “will likely have ramificati­ons” for its health discrimina­tion rule.

But health care is different, HHS argued. “The binary biological character of sex (which is ultimately grounded in genetics) takes on special importance in the health context,” administra­tion lawyers wrote. “Those implicatio­ns might not be fully addressed by future (job discrimina­tion) rulings even if courts were to deem the categories of sexual orientatio­n or gender identity to be encompasse­d by the prohibitio­n on sex discrimina­tion in (civil rights law).”

Cornell University constituti­onal law scholar Michael Dorf says that doesn’t sound like a persuasive argument to him.

“I don’t think it works very well,” said Dorf. “In Justice Gorsuch’s opinion he’s not saying the word ‘sex’ is ambiguous. He’s saying that when you do all the reasoning, it’s clear that ‘sex’ includes sexual orientatio­n and gender identity.”

Civil rights laws on employment and health care may be different in a technical sense, said Dorf, but “it seems to be a very short distance to say (the Supreme Court ruling) also applies” to sex discrimina­tion in health care.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY WONG MAYE-E ?? In this June 30, 2019, file photo parade-goers carrying rainbow flags walk down a street during the LBGTQ Pride march in New York, to celebrate five decades of LGBTQ pride, marking the 50th anniversar­y of the police raid that sparked the modern-day gay rights movement.
AP PHOTO BY WONG MAYE-E In this June 30, 2019, file photo parade-goers carrying rainbow flags walk down a street during the LBGTQ Pride march in New York, to celebrate five decades of LGBTQ pride, marking the 50th anniversar­y of the police raid that sparked the modern-day gay rights movement.

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