Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Transgende­r military ban reversed

Defense chief calls new inclusive order ‘right thing to do’

- By Lolita C. Baldor and Zeke Miller

New order prohibits any service member from being forced out of the military on the basis of gender identity.

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden signed an order Monday reversing a Trump-era Pentagon policy that largely barred transgende­r individual­s from serving in the military.

The new order, which Biden signed in the Oval Office during a meeting with Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, overturns a ban ordered by President Donald Trump in a tweet during his first year in office. It immediatel­y prohibits any service member from being forced out of the military on the basis of gender identity.

The decision comes as Biden plans to turn his attention to equity issues that he believes continue to shadow nearly all aspects of American life. Ahead of his inaugurati­on, Biden’s transition team circulated a memo saying Biden planned to use his first full week as president “to advance equity and support communitie­s of color and other underserve­d communitie­s.”

As he signed the order Monday, Biden said, “What I’m doing is enabling all qualified Americans to serve their country in uniform.”

The order directs the department­s of Defense and Homeland Security to take steps to implement the order for the military and the Coast Guard. And it says they must reexamine the records of service members who were discharged or denied reenlistme­nt due to gender identity issues under the previous policy.

It requires the department­s to submit a report to

the president on their progress within 60 days.

Austin, in a statement, voiced support for the change and said the Pentagon will work over the next two months to implement the new policy.

“I fully support the President’s direction that all transgende­r individual­s who wish to serve in the United States military and can meet the appropriat­e standards shall be able to do so openly and free from discrimina­tion,” said Austin, who also was formally sworn in as defense chief by Vice President Kamala Harris on

Monday. “This is the right thing to do. It is also the smart thing to do.”

Congress members and advocates hailed the signing.

“This is the triumph of evidence-based policy over discrimina­tion,” said Aaron Belkin, the executive director of the Palm Center, which researches and advocates against LGBTQ discrimina­tion. “The inclusive policy will make it easier for trans troops to do their jobs and to fulfill their missions.”

The Trump policy triggered a number of lawsuits, including from transgende­r

individual­s who wanted to join the military and found themselves blocked.

“It is my highest goal to serve my country in the U.S. military and I’ve fought this ban because I know that I am qualified to serve,” said Nicolas Talbott, an aspiring service member involved in one of the lawsuits. “I’m thrilled and relieved that I and other transgende­r Americans can now be evaluated solely on our ability to meet military standards. I look forward to becoming the best service member I can be.”

Others disagreed. Tony Perkins, president

of the Family Research Council, said the move would divert “precious dollars from mission-critical training to something as controvers­ial as gender reassignme­nt surgery.”

Until a few years ago, service members could be discharged from the military for being transgende­r, but that changed during the Obama administra­tion. In 2016, Defense Secretary Ash Carter announced that transgende­r people already serving in the military would be allowed to serve openly. And the military set July 1, 2017, as the date when transgende­r individual­s would be allowed to enlist.

After Trump took office, however, his administra­tion delayed the enlistment date and called for additional study to determine if allowing transgende­r individual­s to serve would affect military readiness or effectiven­ess.

A few weeks later, Trump caught military leaders by surprise, tweeting that the government wouldn’t accept or allow transgende­r individual­s to serve “in any capacity” in the military. “Our military must be focused on decisive and overwhelmi­ng victory and cannot be burdened with the tremendous medical costs and disruption that transgende­r in the military would entail,” he wrote.

After a lengthy and complicate­d legal battle and additional reviews, the Defense Department in April 2019 approved the new policy that fell short of an all-out ban but barred transgende­r troops and military recruits from transition­ing to another sex and required most individual­s to serve in what the administra­tion called their “birth gender.”

Under that policy, currently serving transgende­r troops and anyone who had signed an enlistment contract before the effective date could continue with plans for hormone treatments and gender transition if they had been diagnosed with gender dysphoria.

But after that date, no one with gender dysphoria who was taking hormones or has transition­ed to another gender was allowed to enlist. Troops that were already serving and were diagnosed with gender dysphoria were required to serve in the gender assigned at birth and were barred from taking hormones or getting transition surgery.

 ?? DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, a retired four-star Army general, elbow-bumps Vice President Kamala Harris during his ceremonial swearing-in Monday in the Roosevelt Room of the White House.
DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, a retired four-star Army general, elbow-bumps Vice President Kamala Harris during his ceremonial swearing-in Monday in the Roosevelt Room of the White House.

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