The families of two transgender high school athletes in New Hampshire have added the administration of President Donald Trump to a lawsuit that defies the laws that prevent athletes from competing in girls’ sports.
Adolescent plaintiffs, Parker Tirrell and Iris Turmelle, originally filed the lawsuit last year to challenge a current state law of New Hampshire that prohibits trans athletes from participating in girls’ sports. On Wednesday, a federal judge granted a request to add the Trump administration to the list of defendants on the recent executive order of the President.
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Trump signed the executive order of “No Men In Women’s Sports” on February 5, which prohibited any federal financing for educational institutions that allow biological men to compete in women’s sports teams.
New Hampshire was already one of the 25 states with an established law to enforce similar prohibitions on trans inclusion, but Tirrell and Turmelle have been allowed to compete in girls’ teams anyway, thanks to the decision of a federal judge in Your status.
“The systematic orientation of transgender people in US institutions is chilling, but addressing young people in schools, denying them essential support and opportunities during their most vulnerable years, it is especially cruel,” said Chris Erchull, a happy lawyer.
The lawyers claimed Trump’s executive order, together with parties to a January 20 Executive Order That prohibits federal money from being used to “promote gender ideology”, submit adolescents and all transgender girls to discrimination in violation of federal guarantees of equal protection and their rights under Title IX.
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The lawyers also said that executive orders illegally submit adolescents to the threat of losing federal funds to allow them to practice sports.
The situation involving the two trans athletes has also caused a second demand after parents carried bracelets that said “XX” in reference to female biological chromosomes, and were supposedly banned from school lands to use them.
The plaintiffs Kyle Fellers and Anthony Fote sued the Bow School District after being expelled from the land of the school for using the bracelets in the football game of their daughters in September.
In The demand Archived by Fellers and Footo, they alleged that school officials told them to remove the bracelets or that they would have to leave the game.
Both parents say that the intention of the bracelet was not to protest against Tirrell, but to support their own daughters in a game that presented a biological man.