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		Trump transgender troop limits can take 
		effect, top court decides 
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		 [January 23, 2019] 
		By Andrew Chung 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme 
		Court on Tuesday handed President Donald Trump a victory on his policy 
		barring many transgender people from the military, lifting lower court 
		rulings that had blocked it on constitutional grounds from going into 
		effect.
 
 The decision, with the court's five conservative justices prevailing 
		over its four liberals, granted the Trump administration's request to 
		put on hold injunctions issued by federal judges against enforcement of 
		the policy while a challenge to its legality continues in lower courts.
 
 The court did not resolve the underlying question of the legality of the 
		Republican president's plan, which reversed the landmark 2016 policy of 
		his Democratic predecessor Barack Obama to let transgender people for 
		the first time serve openly in the armed forces and receive medical care 
		to transition genders.
 
 But in lifting the injunctions, the court signaled it likely would 
		decide in favor on the administration when it eventually is asked to 
		rule on the merits of the challenge brought by transgender people 
		already in the military or hoping to join. The plaintiffs argued that 
		the policy violated the U.S. Constitution's guarantee of equal 
		protection under the law.
 
		 
		
 The justices declined the administration's request to immediately take 
		up the fight over the policy's legality even before a California-based 
		federal appeals court that often has been criticized by Trump rules on 
		the matter.
 
 Attorneys for the plaintiffs condemned the court's action and said some 
		current troops could face discharge. Various injunctions had allowed new 
		transgender troops to join the military as of Jan. 1, 2018, in addition 
		to the estimated thousands already serving. The U.S. military allowed 
		gay troops to serve openly for the first time starting in 2011 under 
		Obama.
 
 "For more than 30 months, transgender troops have been serving our 
		country openly with valor and distinction, but now the rug has been 
		ripped out from under them, once again," said Peter Renn, an attorney 
		for Lambda Legal, which represents some of the plaintiffs.
 
 House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat, said Trump's 
		"ban on trans Americans serving in our nation's military was 
		purpose-built to humiliate brave men & women seeking to serve their 
		country."
 
 The Department of Defense praised the court's action.
 
 "As always, we treat all transgender persons with respect and dignity. 
		DoD's proposed policy is NOT a ban on service by transgender persons," 
		the Pentagon said in a statement, adding that the policy was based on 
		"professional military judgment and will ensure that the U.S. Armed 
		Forces remain the most lethal and combat effective fighting force in the 
		world."
 
 Trump, whose administration also has taken other steps to limit the 
		rights of transgender Americans, in 2017 announced a plan to ban 
		transgender people from the military. Trump cited the "tremendous 
		medical costs and disruption" of having transgender troops.
 
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			Light from the setting sun shines on the Supreme Court in 
			Washington, U.S., January 20, 2018. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts/File 
			Photo 
            
 
            In March 2018, Trump backed a revised policy crafted by then-Defense 
			Secretary Jim Mattis to ban transgender people who seek or have 
			undergone gender transition steps. It also would ban under certain 
			circumstances transgender people who experience gender dysphoria, a 
			condition the American Psychiatric Association defines as clinically 
			significant distress due to "a conflict between a person's physical 
			or assigned gender" and the individual's gender identity.
 LEGAL WRANGLING
 
 Federal courts blocked the administration's original policy, finding 
			it unconstitutional. The administration then failed to convince 
			judges in Washington state, California and the District of Columbia 
			that the revised policy was any more legally sound.
 
 Trump got a boost on Jan. 4 when a federal appeals court overturned 
			an injunction issued by a judge in the U.S. capital. A fourth 
			injunction issued by a judge in Maryland will have to be lifted 
			before Trump's policy can be implemented, but the administration 
			said the justices' action applies to that one, too.
 
 A 2016 Pentagon-commissioned study found that any impact on cost or 
			military readiness from having transgender troops would be marginal. 
			It estimated there were around 2,450 transgender troops at the time. 
			Not all transgender people experience gender dysphoria, according to 
			the American Psychiatric Association, which opposes a transgender 
			military ban.
 
 The new policy lets people diagnosed with gender dysphoria after 
			entering the military continue to serve only if they are willing to 
			do so in their "biological sex." The administration has said 937 
			active-duty service members have been diagnosed with gender 
			dysphoria since 2016.
 
 Mattis announced his resignation in December over other differences 
			with Trump.
 
 
             
			Trump's administration has rescinded federal guidance protecting 
			transgender students in public schools concerning bathroom access, 
			while the Justice Department has argued that a federal law against 
			workplace discrimination on the basis of sex does not cover 
			transgender employees.
 
 The Supreme Court in 2017 sidestepped a major ruling in another 
			transgender rights case when it canceled arguments in a bathroom 
			access dispute involving a Virginia high school student after the 
			administration reversed the federal guidance.
 
 (Reporting by Andrew Chung; Editing by Will Dunham)
 
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