US Supreme Court to hear challenge to ban on transgender care for minors
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[June 25, 2024]
By Andrew Chung
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court agreed on Monday to decide
the legality of a Republican-backed ban in Tennessee on gender-affirming
medical care for transgender minors, as the justices waded into another
contentious issue implicating LGBT rights.
They took up an appeal by Democratic President Joe Biden's
administration of a lower court's decision upholding Tennessee's ban on
medical treatments including hormones and surgeries for minors
experiencing gender dysphoria. The court will hear the case in its next
term, which begins in October.
The challengers contend that banning care for transgender youth violates
the U.S. Constitution's 14th Amendment's equal protection and due
process guarantees by discriminating against these adolescents based on
sex and transgender status.
Republican-led states have passed numerous similar measures in recent
years targeting medications or surgical interventions for adolescents
with gender dysphoria - the clinical diagnosis for significant distress
that can result from an incongruence between a person's gender identity
and the sex they were assigned at birth.
Lawmakers supporting the restrictions have cast doubt on the treatments,
calling them experimental and potentially harmful. Medical associations,
noting that gender dysphoria is associated with higher rates of suicide,
have said gender-affirming care can be life-saving and that long-term
studies show its effectiveness.
Several plaintiffs - including two transgender boys, a transgender girl
and their parents - sued in Tennessee to defend the treatments they have
said improved their happiness and wellbeing. The U.S. Justice Department
intervened in the lawsuit to also challenge the law.
Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti said the law is "protecting
kids from irreversible gender treatments" and that he was looking
forward to "finishing the fight in the United States Supreme Court."
The law bans healthcare workers from administering puberty blockers and
hormones for purposes "inconsistent with the minor's sex," but allows
treatments for congenital conditions or early puberty. Providers can be
sued and face fines and professional discipline for violations.
'WREAK HAVOC'
Lawyers representing the plaintiffs said they were grateful these youths
and their families will have their day in the highest U.S. court. The
Supreme Court has "historically rejected efforts to uphold
discriminatory laws, and without similar action here, these punitive,
categorical bans on the provision of gender-affirming care will continue
to wreak havoc on the lives of transgender youth and their families,"
said Tara Borelli of Lambda Legal, an LGBT legal group.
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A view of the U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington, U.S., June
17, 2024. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo
American Civil Liberties Union
lawyer Chase Strangio said bans like the one in Tennessee represent
a "dangerous and discriminatory affront to the wellbeing of
transgender youth across the country" and are "the result of an
openly political effort to wage war on a marginalized group and our
most fundamental freedoms."
The Justice Department declined to comment on Monday.
A federal judge blocked the law in Tennessee in 2023, finding that
it likely violates the 14th Amendment.
In a 2-1 decision in September 2023, the Cincinnati, Ohio-based 6th
Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the judge's preliminary
injunction.
"Prohibiting citizens and legislatures from offering their
perspectives on high-stakes medical policies, in which compassion
for the child points in both directions, is not something
life-tenured federal judges should do," the 6th Circuit's ruling
stated.
Biden's administration urged the Supreme Court to take up the
matter, saying state bans "inflict profound harms on transgender
adolescents and their families by denying medical treatments that
the affected adolescents, their parents and their doctors have all
concluded are appropriate and necessary to treat a serious medical
condition."
The Supreme Court on Monday did not act on a separate appeal of the
6th Circuit's decision also upholding a similar law in Kentucky.
The law was among numerous measures pursued by Republicans at the
state level to restrict LGBT rights. Such measures also have
included bans on discussion of gender identity in schools,
clampdowns on drag shows and blocking transgender participation in
sports.
The Supreme Court has confronted several cases in the past decade
implicating LGBT rights. In 2015, it legalized same-sex marriage
nationwide. In 2020, it ruled that a landmark federal law forbidding
workplace discrimination protects gay and transgender employees.
But in 2018, the justices ruled in favor of a Denver-area baker who
refused based on his Christian views to make a wedding cake for a
gay couple. In 2023, they ruled in a case from Washington state that
the constitutional right to free speech allows certain businesses to
refuse to provide services for same-sex weddings.
(Reporting by Andrew Chung; Editing by Will Dunham)
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