The Supreme Court agreed Thursday to hear a case over state restrictions on weather transgender students can join women’s sports teams.
Just two weeks after upholding a ban on medically-induced gender changes in underage youth, the justices said they will review lower court rulings in favor of transgender athletes in Idaho and West Virginia.
The nationwide battle over the participation of transitioning men in biological girls’ sports teams has played out at both the state and federal levels as Republicans have leveraged the issue as a fight for athletic fairness for women and girls.
More than two dozen states have enacted laws barring transgender women and girls from participating in sports competitions, outraging Democrats that believe gender is a “social construct” and not a biological reality.
At the federal level, the Trump administration has filed lawsuits and launched investigations over state and school policies that have allowed transgender athletes to endanger young women and welcomed biological males into women’s changing rooms.
This week, the University of Pennsylvania modified a trio of school records set by transgender swimmer Lia Thomas and said it would apologize to all the female athletes “disadvantaged” by her participation on the women’s swimming team, part of a resolution of a federal civil rights case.
Republican President Donald Trump also has acted aggressively in other areas involving transgender people, including removing transgender troops from military service. In May, the Supreme Court allowed the ouster of transgender service members to proceed, reversing lower courts that had blocked it.
The new case will be argued in the fall.
West Virginia is appealing a lower-court ruling that found the ban violates the rights of Becky Pepper-Jackson, who has is taking puberty-blocking medication and identifies as a girl. Pepper-Jackson sued the state in middle school to be allowed to compete on the girls’ cross country and track teams.
This past school year, Pepper-Jackson qualified for the West Virginia girls high school state track meet, finishing third in the discus throw and eighth in the shot put in the Class AAA division.
The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled for Pepper-Jackson in two areas, under the Constitution’s equal protection clause and the landmark federal law known as Title IX that forbids sex discrimination in education.
Idaho in 2020 became the first state in the nation to ban transgender women and girls from playing on women’s sports teams sponsored by public schools, colleges, and universities.
The American Civil Liberties Union and the far-left group Legal Voice sued Idaho. The state asked for Supreme Court review after lower courts blocked the state’s ban while the lawsuit continues.
The justices did not act on a third case from Arizona that raises the same issue.
The Associated Press contributed to this article