Two of President Donald Trump's executive orders targeting the rights of transgender and nonbinary people face court challenges filed Friday.
A group of transgender people sued in U.S. District Court in Boston over an order that led to the halting of allowing gender markers to be changed on passports and barring the use of the “X” marker used by many nonbinary people.
The plaintiffs, represented by the ACLU, say the abrupt policy change last month did not comply with a requirement for a 60-day notice and comment period — and that it discriminates based on sex and, in some cases, transgender status.
The order in question was one that back in office that said the government would recognize only people's sex and not their gender — and defined sex as unchangeable. That position is at odds with what the American Medical Association and other mainstream medical groups say.
Also Friday, three Democratic states sued the Trump administration on over its order to for transgender people under 19.
Washington state Attorney General Nick Brown filed the federal lawsuit in the Western District of Washington. The attorneys general of Oregon and Minnesota, and three doctors, also joined as plaintiffs. The complaint argues that the order discriminates against transgender people.
Trump signed an executive order last month directing federally run insurance programs, including Medicaid and TRICARE for military families, to exclude coverage for such care. It also calls on the Department of Justice to pursue litigation and legislation to oppose it.
Medicaid programs in some states cover gender-affirming care. The new order suggests that the practice could end, and targets hospitals and universities that receive federal money and provide the care.
“That order poses an immediate threat to young people all across Washington state, and to the medical professionals in Washington who provide much-needed health care,” Brown said at a news conference in Seattle.
The complaint argues that the order violates equal rights protections, the separation of powers and states' powers to regulate what is not specifically delegated to the federal government.
The development comes after families with transgender or nonbinary children in a Baltimore federal court earlier this week.
While the legal fights go on, some providers have for transgender young people while officials in New York have that it would violate the law to stop the services.
In addition to the orders on health care access and , Trump has also signed orders that open the door to banning transgender people from and set up new rules about how about gender.
Trump also signed an on Wednesday intended to ban transgender athletes from participating in girls’ and women’s sports.
have already been filed on the military order and a plan to move transgender women in federal prisons to men’s facilities. Others are likely , just as there have been challenges to of .
Researchers have found that adolescents receive the care, which includes treatments such as puberty blockers, hormone treatments and surgeries — though surgery is rare for children.
As transgender people have gained visibility and acceptance in some ways, there’s been vehement pushback. At least 26 states have passed laws to restrict or ban the care for minors. The heard arguments last year but has not yet ruled on whether Tennessee’s ban on the care is constitutional.
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Associated Press writers Lindsay Whitehurst in Washington and Geoff Mulvihill in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, contributed.
Claire Rush, The Associated Press