Supreme Court Rules on Whether Can Protect Kids From Transgender Procedures

The Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that states have the constitutional right to pass laws protecting children from irreversible transgender medical interventions.
The court ruled 5-4 to uphold a Tennessee law prohibiting minors from attempting to medically change their sex.
Chief Justice John Roberts delivered the opinion of the court, in which Justices Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett Joined. Justice Samuel Alito, a George W. Bush appointee, agreed with large parts of the opinion. The court’s three liberal justices, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson, dissented.
The court held that Tennessee’s law “satisfies rational basis review,” rejecting plaintiffs’ claims that the law discriminates against people on the basis of gender identity.
Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, a Republican, signed a bill banning puberty blockers, hormone replacement regimens, and transgender surgeries for children into law on March 22, 2023.
In April 2023, the American Civil Liberties Union sued the state of Tennessee on behalf of Samantha and Brian Williams, whose 15-year-old son says he identifies as a transgender girl.
The Biden-Harris administration joined the lawsuit, contending that Tennessee’s law is unconstitutional.
The defendant in the case is Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti, a Republican.
“The fundamental question of the Supreme Court case is: Does the mere fact that hormones affect kids differently mean that any regulation of hormones for kids is going to be a constitutional issue?” Skrmetti told The Daily Signal in a phone interview the night of oral arguments in the case<
“We regulate medicine all the time,” Skrmetti continued. “The states have been regulating the practice of medicine for hundreds of years. And yet we have this one odd carve-out because boys and girls are different, and that’s such a fundamental fact of human existence, it seems hard to see how we could be boxed in and left unable to protect kids just because we happen to have two sexes.”
In oral arguments, lawyers for the U.S. government<
In the interview with The Daily Signal, Skrmetti said the existence of two biological sexes shouldn’t prevent states from “protecting kids.”
The position that the Tennessee law is sex discrimination is a “hyperformal reading of the law” that is better suited for “statutory text,” the state’s attorney general said.
“When you’re looking at the Constitution, and there were questions [by the justices] to this effect, you have to be careful about an overly formal reading that has significant consequences,” Skrmetti told The Daily Signal. “We’ve long thought that the sex-discrimination argument here is misplaced.”
The post Supreme Court Rules on Whether Can Protect Kids From Transgender Procedures appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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