President Trump on Wednesday rescinded protections for
transgender students that had allowed them to use bathrooms corresponding with
their gender identity, overruling his own education secretary and placing his
administration firmly in the middle of the culture wars that many Republicans
have tried to leave behind.
In a joint letter, the top civil rights officials from
the Justice Department and the Education Department rejected
the Obama administration’s position that nondiscrimination laws require schools
to allow transgender students to use the bathrooms of their choice.
That directive, they said, was improperly and arbitrarily
devised, “without due regard for the primary role of the states and local
school districts in establishing educational policy.”
The question of how to address the “bathroom debate,”
as
it has become known, opened a rift inside the Trump administration, pitting
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos against Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Mr.
Sessions, who had been expected to move quickly to roll back the civil rights
expansions put in place under his Democratic predecessors, wanted to act
decisively because of two pending court cases that could have upheld the
protections and pushed the government into further litigation.
But Ms. DeVos initially resisted signing off and told Mr.
Trump that she was uncomfortable because of the potential harm that rescinding
the protections could cause transgender students, according to three
Republicans with direct knowledge of the internal discussions.
Mr. Sessions,
who has opposed expanding gay, lesbian and transgender rights, pushed Ms. DeVos
to relent. After getting nowhere, he took his objections to the White House
because he could not go forward without her consent. Mr. Trump sided with his
attorney general, the Republicans said, and told Ms. DeVos in a meeting in the
Oval Office on Tuesday that he wanted her to drop her opposition. And Ms.
DeVos, faced with the alternative of resigning or defying the president, agreed
to go along.
Ms. DeVos’s unease was evident in a strongly worded statement she
released on Wednesday night, in which she said she considered it a “moral
obligation” for every school in America to protect all students from
discrimination, bullying and harassment.
She said she had directed the Education
Department’s Office for Civil Rights to investigate all claims of such
treatment “against those who are most vulnerable in our schools,” but also
argued that bathroom access was not a federal matter.
Gay rights supporters made their displeasure clear. Outside the White
House, several hundred people protested the decision, chanting, “No hate, no
fear, trans students are welcome here.”
Individual schools will remain free to let transgender students use the
bathrooms with which they are most comfortable. And the effect of the
administration’s decision will not be immediate because a federal court had
already issued a
nationwide injunction barring
enforcement of the Obama order.
The dispute highlighted the degree to which transgender rights issues,
which Mr. Trump expressed sympathy for during the campaign, continue to split
Republicans, even as many in the party argue that it is time to move away from
social issues and focus more on bread-and-butter pocketbook concerns.
Within the
administration, it also threatened to become another distraction for Mr. Trump
after a tumultuous first month in office. And it showed how Mr. Trump, who has
taken a more permissive stance on gay rights and same-sex marriage than many of his fellow Republicans,
is bowing to pressure from the religious right and contradicting his own
personal views.
Social conservatives, one of Mr. Trump’s most loyal constituencies,
applauded him for honoring a pledge he had made to them during the campaign.
They had argued that former President Barack Obama’s policy would allow
potential sexual predators access to bathrooms and create an unsafe environment
for children.
“The federal government has absolutely no right to strip parents and
local schools of their rights to provide a safe learning environment for
children,” said Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council.
But supporters of transgender rights said the Trump administration was
acting recklessly and cruelly. “The consequences of this decision will no doubt
be heartbreaking,” said Chad Griffin, president of the Human Rights Campaign.
“This isn’t a states’ rights issue; it’s a civil rights issue.”
Bathroom access emerged as a major and
divisive issue last March when North Carolina passed a bill barring transgender
people from using bathrooms that do not match the sex on their birth
certificate. It was part of a broader
bill eliminating
anti-discrimination protections for gay and transgender people.
Gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender issues became a point of attack
for opponents of Ms. DeVos’s nomination last month, as Democrats questioned her
about the extensive financial support that some of her relatives — part of her
wealthy and politically active Michigan family — had provided to anti-gay
causes. Ms. DeVos distanced herself from her relatives on the issue, saying
their political activities did not represent her views.
While Wednesday’s order significantly rolls back
transgender protections, it does include language stating that schools must
protect transgender students from bullying, a provision Ms. DeVos asked for,
one person with direct knowledge of the process said.
“All schools must ensure that students, including
L.G.B.T. students, are able to learn and thrive in a safe environment,” the
letter said, echoing Ms. DeVos’s comments at her confirmation hearing but not
expressly using the word transgender. Ms. DeVos, who has been quietly
supportive of gay rights for years, was said to have voiced her
concern about the high rates of suicide among transgender students. In one 2016
study by the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, for instance, 30
percent reported a history of at least one suicide attempt.
Mr. Trump appears to have been swayed by conservatives in
his administration who reminded him that he had promised during the campaign to
leave the question of bathroom use to the states.
But he had given conflicting signals on the issue, and on
gay rights more broadly. He said last
April, for instance, that he supported the right of transgender
people to “use the bathroom they feel is appropriate,” and added that Caitlyn
Jenner, perhaps the most famous transgender person in the country, could use
whichever bathroom at Trump Tower she wanted. He has also called the Supreme
Court decision legalizing same-sex marriage settled law. “And I’m fine with
that,” he told CBS News after the November election.
Despite his personal views, Mr. Trump’s decisions in
office have been consistently conservative on social issues. And he has shown considerable
deference to the religious right, naming many religious
conservatives to top cabinet posts and pledging to fight for religious freedom
protections and restrictions on abortion.
The Justice Department is eager to move quickly in laying
out its legal position on transgender policy, to avoid confusion in cases
moving through the courts.
The dispute has underscored the influence that Mr.
Sessions, an early and ardent supporter of Mr. Trump, is likely to exercise
over domestic policy. As someone who has a long record of opposing efforts to
broaden federal protections on a range of matters under his purview —
immigration, voting rights and gay rights, for example — he has moved quickly
to set the Justice Department on a strikingly different course than his predecessors
in the Obama administration.
very soon theres going to be a protest for Animal transgender in Unisted State.....lolzzzzz
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