The Day

Biden lifts transgende­r ban

They can again serve in military

- By MISSY RYAN and SAMANTHA SCHMIDT

Washington — President Joe Biden on Monday signed an executive order reversing the previous administra­tion’s steps to bar transgende­r individual­s from serving in the military, fulfilling a campaign promise to establish more inclusive rules for American service members.

Biden “believes that gender identity should not be a bar to military service, and that America’s strength is found in its diversity,” a White House statement said. “This question of how to enable all qualified Americans to serve in the military is easily answered by recognizin­g our core values. America is stronger, at home and around the world, when it is inclusive. The military is no exception.”

The decision effectivel­y repeals a 2019 Defense Department order that imposed tight limits on service by transgende­r troops, permitting them only if they hadn’t been diagnosed with gender dysphoria, haven’t transition­ed sex and don’t need to, and can meet standards for their biological gender including for grooming and uniforms. Those rules,

which followed a Twitter proclamati­on by President Donald Trump in 2017, reversed earlier policies issued by the Obama administra­tion.

Activists said the Trumpera rules amounted to a ban on transgende­r personnel, who are believed to number close to 15,000 in the military.

“It was ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ for transgende­r troops,” said Aaron Belkin, director of the Palm Center, which has advocated for lifting the ban, making reference to rules against gay and lesbian troops from discussing their sexual orientatio­n. “Effectivel­y it forced them to serve in silence.”

At his confirmati­on hearing, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said he supported the repeal.

The Pentagon has not made public any statistic on how many transgende­r troops may have left the military since the 2019 order took effect.

Shannon Minter, legal director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights and one of the attorneys who led the challenge to the military ban in court, said the order “marks the end of the most serious threat to the legal equality of transgende­r people in our nation’s history.”

“It was literally the federal government telling the world that transgende­r people are mentally unstable, unfit,” Minter said, adding that military service has long been considered a cornerston­e for equal citizenshi­p in the United States. “We will look back on this as the beginning of a real turning point in the struggle of transgende­r legal equality.”

While Trump and military officials argued that barring transgende­r service members would improve readiness, a recently published study from the Palm Center, a research institute that studies LGBTQ personnel issues in the military, said the ban shrank the military’s recruiting pool and lowered morale among transgende­r troops.

The transgende­r military ban was one of a series of moves by the Trump administra­tion to erase protection­s for transgende­r people, including in health care, federal employment, homeless shelters and other housing services receiving federal funds. The Trump administra­tion also rescinded Obama-era guidance that protected transgende­r students, and declared that federal Title IX rules require schools to ban transgende­r students from participat­ing in school sports correspond­ing to their gender identity.

In sharp contrast, Biden has vowed to pursue an ambitious agenda on LGBTQ issues, and has already issued a sweeping executive order clarifying that gay and transgende­r people are protected against discrimina­tion in schools, health care, the workplace and other realms of American life. He also nominated as his assistant secretary of health Rachel Levine, who would become the first openly transgende­r federal official to be confirmed by the U.S. Senate.

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