A federal judge on Thursday struck down President Joe Bidenâs rules granting accommodations for transgender students, such as cross-sex bathroom usage, into federal education laws.
Detractors have called the Department of Educationâs rules reinterpreting Title IX a ârewriteâ of the law, because they tried to open pathways that may have let males into girlsâ bathrooms or sports, when the law was originally written to prevent sex discrimination against girls and women in schools and colleges.
U.S. District Court Judge Danny C. Reeves of the Eastern District of Kentucky agreed with that interpretation.
He vacated the new rules Thursday.
Theyâre arbitrary and capricious, exceed the executive branchâs power and are unconstitutional, the judge wrote.
A predominant Republican faction of Wyoming legislators celebrated the ruling.
âWe applaud this common sense ruling out of Kentucky,â the Wyoming Freedom Caucus posted Thursday to X, formerly Twitter. âWe will not rest until common sense is codified in Wyoming and our women and girls are protected from the predations of the radical Left.â
The Wyoming Freedom Caucus is a group of Republicans that has taken control of the Wyoming House of Representatives, and that often emphasizes social issues in its legislative approach.
This Five Yearsâ Argument
For nearly five years, litigants have been arguing about whether a 2020 U.S. Supreme Court case banning employers from discriminating against employees for being transgender could transfer into federal education laws.
The implications of the argument are huge: âdiscriminationâ against transgender students could mean keeping males out of girlsâ sports and girlsâ bathrooms, or requiring teachers to use transgender studentsâ preferred pronouns.
Judge Reevesâ Thursday ruling proclaims the two laws completely separate, and Bidenâs interpretation of Title IX to be directly contrary to the lawâs essence and purpose.
Reeves also declared it unconstitutional, saying it could compel teachers to use studentsâ preferred pronouns against their parentsâ wishes, and it would violate teachersâ freedom of speech.
âPut simply, there is nothing in the text or statutory design of Title IX to suggest that discrimination âon the basis of sexâ means anything other than it has since Title IXâs inception,â wrote Reeves, âthat recipients of federal funds under Title IX may not treat a person worse than another similarly-situated on the basis of the personâs sex, i.e., male or female.â
Title IX makes schools that receive money via its provisions offer equal opportunities to males and females. But it has always allowed for differing arrangements that hinge on sex distinctions, like separate changing rooms and dormitories, Reeves added.
âThrowing gender identity into the mix eviscerates the statute and renders it largely meaningless,â wrote the judge.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.