Deadline: Legal Blog--Supreme Court takes up issue of transgender girls and women in sports for next term [View all]
The courts decision to consider the matter sets up the possibility of two big rulings against transgender people two terms in a row.
https://www.msnbc.com/deadline-white-house/deadline-legal-blog/supreme-court-trans-sports-teams-girls-women-rcna216720
The Supreme Court on Thursday agreed to take up the hot-button issue of whether transgender girls and women are allowed to participate in sports on girls and womens teams.
The courts decision to consider the matter sets up the possibility of two big rulings against transgender people two terms in a row, following last months 6-3 ruling in the Skrmetti case, in which the Republican-appointed supermajority upheld Tennessees ban on gender-affirming care for minors. It takes four justices to grant review of an appeal.
Like the Skrmetti case, the courts forthcoming decision in the sports-related appeals has national implications. According to the American Civil Liberties Union, 27 states have banned transgender youth from playing school sports since 2020.
Many of these bans allow for invasive forms of sex testing that put all female student athletes at risk and open the door for any school official or adult to question and harass young women, the ACLU said.....
With the high courts decision to take the appeal, its now one of several on the courts docket so far next term backed by ADF. The justices add appeals to the docket on a rolling basis and typically hear arguments in two-week sessions from October through April.
Opposing review in a brief last year, ACLU lawyers, who also represented the transgender side in the Skrmetti case, urged the justices to at least wait to decide what to do with this sports case until Skrmetti was decided.
To the extent that there are unresolved issues in the context of athletics following Skrmetti, there will be plenty of future vehicles for this Court to resolve those issues on a complete record and with further development of the issues in the lower courts, they wrote to the justices, who nonetheless chose this case as a vehicle.
In the West Virginia case, state officials said the appeals court took on an exceptionally important issue and got most every step exceptionally wrong. They asked the justices to grant review to ensure that womens sports are preserved and protected. Opposing review in a brief last year, ACLU lawyers similarly referenced the then-pending Skrmetti case. And like in the Idaho case, they raised procedural reasons not to take the West Virginia case, but the justices nonetheless took this one up as well.