Former Gorsuch Law Clerk Pitches Something That Will Surely Infuriate Libs on Deportations
Police Arrest 30 Violent Anti-Israel Protesters After They Occupy University Building
Houthis Surrender After Trump’s Bombing Barrage — Red Sea Attacks to Stop
Trump Just Made This Nation Drop its Tariffs to Zero
There's a Reason Some People Oppose Gun Rights
Pro-Migration Reporter Alerts Illegal Immigrants in D.C. of Upcoming ICE Raids
Bessent Gives Another Update on the Trade War With China
Hegseth Launches Historic Purge of Top Brass: 'Fewer Generals, More Warfighters'
Donalds Schools NBC Host on Illegal Aliens
India Launches Military Strikes in Nine Sites in Pakistan
Historic Fentanyl Bust: Pam Bondi Reveals One of the Largest Seizures in U.S....
Liberals on CNN Keep Harping on Due Process for Illegal Immigrants, and Scott...
Sanctuary State Governors to Come Before House Oversight Committee
UPDATE: What Ever Happened to the Middle Eastern Illegal Immigrants Who Tried to...
Tipsheet

Supreme Court Issues Ruling on Trump's Transgender Military Ban

AP Photo/Ben Curtis

The Supreme Court on Tuesday gave the Trump administration another victory as it upheld its ban on transgender people serving in the military.

President Donald Trump issued an executive order on January 27 prohibiting trans-identified individuals from serving in the US military. The order argued that there were serious concerns over unit cohesion, mental and physical readiness, and the impact on military efficacy. However, critics claim the order unfairly discriminates against trans-identified people.

Advertisement

The Supreme Court’s order places a stay on a preliminary injunction that a lower court imposed against the policy. It further notes that Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented from the ruling. The stay will remain in effect until the US Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rules on the White House’s appeal of the lower court’s order.

This isn’t the only case against the policy. NBC News reported:

In a separate case, a judge in Washington, D.C., also blocked the policy nationwide, but the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit put that ruling on hold temporarily while it heard arguments on whether to block it more permanently. The court has yet to rule.

To justify the policy, the administration cited a Pentagon report from Trump’s first term showing that trans-identified people harm “military effectiveness and lethality.”

However, opponents argue that trans-identified people are as capable of serving in the military as anyone else. However, another study, conducted by RAND Corp. in 2016, showed that the inclusion of trans-identified people in the military had no negative impact on military operations.

Advertisement

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth supported the policy in a memo, according to The Hill.

“The Department must ensure it is building ‘One Force’ without subgroups defined by anything other than ability or mission adherence. Efforts to split our troops along the lines of identity weaken our Force and make us vulnerable,” Hegseth wrote in a February memo to senior leadership at the Pentagon. 

In the same memo, Hegseth ordered the Defense Department to pause gender-affirming medical care for trans service members. A federal judge later struck down Hegseth’s restrictions as unconstitutional, and the Pentagon resumed care last month.

The president, during his first weeks in office, issued other executive orders related to trans-identified individuals, including banning biological males from competing in women's sports and stopping "gender-affirming care" on minors.


 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement