- Case affects two dozen states that ban treatments for minors
- Constitution ‘doesn’t take sides’ in debate, Kavanaugh says
The US Supreme Court suggested it’s likely to uphold laws that ban gender-affirming treatments for minors as the justices considered a case that could determine the rights of transgender children in two dozen states.
Hearing arguments in Washington, five of the court’s conservatives voiced skepticism at contentions by the Biden administration and affected families that a Tennessee law violates the Constitution’s equal protection guarantee.
“It seems to me that we look to the Constitution, and the Constitution doesn’t take sides on how to resolve that medical and policy debate,” Justice
The case comes at a fraught time for transgender Americans, following a presidential election campaign that helped put them at the center of the nation’s cultural divide.
Tennessee bans puberty blockers, hormone therapy and surgery for those under 18. Opponents say the law and similar measures around the country fly in the face of clinical guidelines for treating gender dysphoria, the condition characterized by distress over the incongruence between one’s gender identity and birth-assigned sex. Supporters say the laws protect vulnerable children from risky and dangerous medical procedures.
Key justices expressed reluctance to second-guess the judgments of state lawmakers. “It seems to me that it is something where we are extraordinarily bereft of expertise,” Chief Justice
Roberts is likely to be a pivotal vote. He was one of two conservatives, along with Justice
Another conservative, Justice
“You agree that the parental rights question is not before the court, so it would be open to parents to continue to press that point in other cases?” she asked Tennessee Solicitor General Matthew Rice, who responded that he did.
Suicide and Drugs
The court’s liberals were pointed in their criticism of the law. Justice
“When you’re 1% of the population or less, very hard to see how the democratic process is going to protect you,” she said. “Blacks were a much larger part of the population, and it didn’t protect them. It didn’t protect women for whole centuries.”
Sotomayor said children with gender dysphoria were at high risk of suicide and drug addiction. “The evidence is very clear that there are some children who actually need this treatment,” she said.
Another liberal, Justice
“I’m worried that we’re undermining the foundations of some of our bedrock equal protection cases,” she said.
The argument itself marked a historic moment, as American Civil Liberties Union lawyer
Strangio, who represents transgender youths and their families, told the justices the law “has taken away the only treatment that relieved years of suffering for each of the adolescent plaintiffs.”
Alito Pushback
Tennessee says it enacted the law last year amid a sharp rise in the number of diagnoses of gender dysphoria among minors. Of Americans 13 to 17 years old, about 1.4% identify as transgender, according to a 2022 study by the Williams Institute.
“Politically accountable lawmakers, not judges, are in the best position to assess this evolving medical issue,” Rice argued.
US Solicitor General
She got pushback from Justice
“For the general run of minors, do you dispute the proposition in fact that in almost all instances the judgment at the present time of the health authorities in the United Kingdom and Sweden is that the risks and dangers greatly outweigh the benefits?” he asked Prelogar.
Prelogar said that, unlike Tennessee, those countries haven’t issued blanket bans.
A federal appeals court upheld the Tennessee law, along with a similar Kentucky measure.
The Supreme Court is scheduled to rule by July in the case, United States v. Skrmetti, 23-477.
(Updates with comments from Sotomayor, Jackson starting in 11th paragraph.)
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Steve Stroth
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