Trump administration trying to define
transgender out of existence: NY Times
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[October 22, 2018]
By Daniel Trotta
(Reuters) - The government of U.S.
President Donald Trump is attempting to strip transgender people of
official recognition by creating a narrow definition of gender as being
only male or female and unchangeable once it is determined at birth, The
New York Times reported on Sunday.
The Department of Health and Human Services has undertaken an effort
across several government departments to establish a legal definition of
sex under Title IX, the federal civil rights law that bans
discrimination on the basis of sex, the Times said, citing a government
memo that it obtained.
That definition would be as either male or female, unchangeable, and
determined by the genitals a person is born with, the Times reported.
Such an interpretation would reverse the expansion of transgender rights
that took place under the previous administration of President Barack
Obama.
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It would also set back aspirations for tolerance and equality among the
estimated 0.7 percent of the population that identifies as transgender.
Most transgender people live with a profound sense that the gender
assigned to them at birth was wrong and transition to the opposite sex,
while others live a non-binary or gender fluid life.
A spokeswoman for the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
declined to comment on what she called "allegedly leaked documents" but
cited a ruling by a conservative U.S. district judge as a guide to
transgender policy.
Ruling on a challenge to one aspect of the Affordable Care Act, U.S.
District Judge Reed O'Connor in Texas found in 2016 that there was no
protection against discrimination on the basis of gender identity.
A leading transgender advocate called the government's reported action a
"super aggressive, dismissive, dangerous move."
"They are saying we don't exist," said Mara Keisling, director of the
National Center for Transgender Rights, in an interview.
The Obama administration enacted regulations and followed court rulings
that protected transgender people from discrimination, upsetting
religious conservatives.
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A man holds up a sign supporting North Carolina's anti-transgender
bathroom law following Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump'
campaign rally in Charlotte, North Carolina, U.S., August 18, 2016.
REUTERS/Carlo Allegri/File Photo
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The Trump administration has sought to ban transgender people from
military service and rescinded guidance to public schools
recommending that transgender students be allowed to use the
bathroom of their choice.
A draft of the Trump administration memo says gender should be
determined "on a biological basis that is clear, grounded in
science, objective and administrable," the memo says, according to
the Times.
Medical science seeking to explain what makes people transgender is
in its infancy.
Psychiatrists no longer consider being transgender a disorder and
several U.S. courts have found the Obama interpretation of
protecting transgender people against discrimination as sound. But
the Trump administration has chosen to abide by the ruling of
O'Connor, the Times said.
"The court order remains in full force and effect today and HHS is
abiding by it as we continue to review the issue," Roger Severino,
the director of the Office for Civil Rights at the Department of
Health and Human Services, said in a statement.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; additional reporting by Patrick Rucker
and Amy Tennery, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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