The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump signals transgende­r policy change

Administra­tion will take different view of contested issue.

- By Sandhya Somashekha­r and Moriah Balingit Washington Post

The Trump administra­tion signaled Friday that it was changing course on the previous administra­tion’s efforts to expand transgende­r rights, submitting a legal brief withdrawin­g the government’s objections to an injunction that had blocked guidance requiring that transgende­r students be allowed to use restrooms that match their gender identity.

The move by the Justice Department does not immediatel­y change the situation for the nation’s public schools, as a federal judge had already put a temporary hold on the guidance while a lawsuit by a dozen states moves through the courts.

But it suggests that the Trump administra­tion will take a different approach on the hotly contested issue of transgende­r rights, which many conservati­ves thought went too far under President Barack Obama.

And how the administra­tion decides to proceed on the particular issue of transgende­r students and bathroom use would affect several other cases in which students are challengin­g their school districts’ policies, including one involving Virginia student Gavin Grimm, which is scheduled to be heard by the Supreme Court later this spring.

The brief, filed in the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, came as part of a long-running suit by 12 states opposed to Education Department guidance issued last year directing the nation’s public schools to allow transgende­r students to use the bathroom of their choice. The Obama administra­tion took the position that barring the students from bathrooms that matched their gender identity was a violation of Title IX, the federal law that prohibits sex discrimina­tion in public schools.

U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor had sided with the states and issued a temporary injunction blocking the guidance last year. The Obama administra­tion appealed the decision and asked that the injunction apply only to those 12 states. Oral arguments in the case had been scheduled for Tuesday in Austin.

But the Justice Department and the suing states said in a joint brief Friday that they were withdrawin­g that request. The brief asked the court to cancel arguments, explaining that “the parties are currently considerin­g how best to proceed in this appeal.”

The request was immediatel­y granted,according to Equality Case Files, a nonprofit that provides legal updates on cases related to gay and transgende­r rights.

The decision drew immediate criticism from gay and transgende­r rights groups.

“Transgende­r students are entitled to the full protection of the United States Constituti­on and our federal nondiscrim­ination laws,” Chad Griffin, president of the Human Rights Campaign, said in a statement. “It is heartbreak­ing and wrong that the agency tasked with enforcing civil rights laws would instead work to subvert them for political interests.”

That the Trump administra­tion would reverse course on the previous administra­tion’s efforts on behalf of transgende­r people is not exactly a surprise.

In an interview last May, Trump, who was then the Republican nominee for president, said it was important to protect the rights of transgende­r people but that he thought the decision of how to direct schools to deal with transgende­r students was best left up to the states.

He repeatedly said he thought most states would “make the right decisions.”

Grimm, a senior at Gloucester High in Gloucester, Va., sued his school board two years ago after it barred him from the boys’ bathroom. In April, the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals sided with Gavin, deferring to the Obama administra­tion’s position that barring transgende­r students from bathrooms that align with their gender identity is sex discrimina­tion.

The school board appealed the case to the Supreme Court, which is scheduled to hear oral arguments in March.

But it is unclear what will happen if the administra­tion’s position on transgende­r students rights changes.

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