High School Trans -Athletes fighting against Trump’s executive order that protects girls’ sports in court

The families of two transgender people in Transgender High School in New Hampshire have added President Donald Trump’s administration to a lawsuit that challenges laws that prevent athletes from competing in girls’ sports.

The Teenage Case Female, Parker Tirrell and Iris Turmelle, initially filed the trial last year to challenge a current New Hampshire State Law that prohibits Trans athletes to participate in girls’ sports. Wednesday, a federal judge met a request to add Trump administration to the list of defendants over the president’s recent executive order.

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Trump signed “No Men In Women’s Sports” executive order on February 5, which banned any federal funding for educational institutions that allow biological men to compete for women’s or girls’ sports teams.

New Hampshire was already one of 25 states with a law in place to enforce similar ban on trans -cluttering, but Tirrell and Turmelle have nevertheless been allowed to compete for girls’ teams thanks to a federal judge’s decision in their state.

“The systematic targeting of transient people across American institutions is cooling down, but targeting young people in schools and refusing them support and essential opportunities in their most vulnerable years is especially cruel,” said Chris Erchull, a happy lawyer.

The lawyers claimed Trump’s executive order along with parts of a 20th January executive order It prohibits federal money from being used to “promote gender ideology” exposing teens and all transking girls to discrimination in violation of federal equal protective guarantees and their rights under section IX.

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The lawyers also claimed that the executive orders illegally vulnerable teenagers’ schools for the threat of losing federal funding to allow them to play sports.

The situation that involved the two trans athletes has also led to another trial after parents were wearing bracelets that read “XX” with reference to the biological female chromosomes, and was allegedly banned from school sites to carry them.

Plaintiffs Kyle Fellers and Anthony Foote sued Bow School District after being banned from school grounds for carrying the bracelets on their daughters’ football match in September.

IN The trial They were filed by Fellers and Foote and claimed that they were asked by the school officials to remove bracelets or that they should leave the game.

Both fathers say that the intention of the bracelet was not to protest on Tirrell, but to support their own daughters in a game containing a biological man.

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