California ‘family’ like Trump calls the State’s Trans athletes drama


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EXCLUSIVE: The California State Athletics Championship will be an epicenter of political tension this weekend. A family with a daughter who tries to win a title is “grateful” to the White House that does not realize, but is not satisfied with where things are in the event.

President Donald Trump called the Golden State and Governor Gavin Newsom in a social position of the truth on Tuesday morning, threatening to reduce funds to the state and even send the authorities to intervene if a transdentifier athlete competes in the category of girls in the meeting.

Only a few hours later, the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) announced that it would make a slight change of rules for the championship this weekend. The change allows biologically female athletes that fell just up to the classification for the championship behind a trans athlete the opportunity to compete for the title this weekend.

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Katie McGuinness of the Canada High School finished seventh at the Jump Women’s High Invitational in Arcadia, California, on April 12, 2025. (Keith Birmingham/Medakes Group/Pasadena Star-News through Getty Images)

Meanwhile, the Canadian high school school, Katie McGuinness, seeks to compete for the girls length jump championship after automatically qualifying last weekend. But McGuinness so far has only ended up behind the trans athlete in the postseason events of this year, including the sectional final on May 17, when he ended in second place to his opponent of Jurupa Valley.

The McGuinness family addressed the president’s intervention in the situation in an exclusive statement to Pak Gazette Digital.

“We are grateful that President Trump is fighting for female athletes and giving them a fair opportunity to compete in a leveling playing field. CIF’s ‘solution’ to this situation, which allows additional girls to compete in the state championship that otherwise does not qualify because the transgender athlete took its place, it is not good enough: it is still an unfair competition and an injustice and an injustice for girls competing,” he said, “he said The family in a statement.

“Allowing biological men to compete in women’s sports is unfair, unfair and challenges common sense,” added the family.

Katie previously spoke against CIF for allowing the situation to get so far in an “America reports” interview of Pak Gazette last week.

“I have nothing against this athlete as a person, and I have nothing against the trans community,” McGuinness said. “My message today is really specifically for CIF and act quickly and timely, because this is a really sensitive problem.”

The Canada star also reported the experience of facing the athlete and facing “genetic” apparent disadvantages in a high -risk secondary competition.

“I remember thinking for myself, ‘Ok, I need to make a great jump,” said McGuinness.

California high school athletes allege that track officials forced them to take off the ‘Protect Girls Sports’ shirts

Katie McGuinness of the Canada High School finished seventh at the Jump Women’s High Invitational in Arcadia, California, on April 12, 2025. (Keith Birmingham/Medakes Group/Pasadena Star-News through Getty Images)

“I ran down the track and stood out, and I saw them measure my brand, and it was 18.9,” he said. “And I remember thinking that there was nothing but I could do. That was all. And he was honestly very discouraged, and I am a high school student, and the winning CIF has always been my goal, and I could not compete with someone who was genetically different from me.”

She made clear her general position on the subject.

“There are simply certain genetic advantages that biological males have not biological girls,” he said. “Frankly, I can’t bear that.”

The Trans athlete has dominated the postseason of the girls this year in the triple jump and the leap and is ready to compete for the state title on Saturday. The athlete competes for the Juraupa Valley high school in Riverside County, California, a community that has been shaken by multiple controversies that involve trans athletes, including a demand that involves a separate situation in Martin Luther King high school.

The CIF is already under a federal investigation of the Title IX of the United States Department of Education.

After Trump signed the Executive Order of Sports of No Men’s In Women’s on February 5, the CIF was one of the first secondary school leagues in the country to announce that the order would not follow, but would comply with California state law.

Trans athletes has been allowed to compete as women and girls since 2014, when a law called AB 1266 entered into force after passing in 2013.

The state legislature did not approve two bills that would reverse this policy on April 1, despite the testimony of multiple athletes and their families in California that have been affected by the problem.

Newsom addressed the issue during an episode of its podcast in early March.

“Well, I think it’s a problem of justice,” Newsom told the guest conservative influence Charlie Kirk. “I completely agree with you. It is deeply unfair.

“So it is easy to call the injustice of that. There is also a humility and a grace … it is more likely that these poor people commit suicide, have anxiety and depression, and the way in which people speak with vulnerable communities is a problem with which I also have difficulties.”

Since then, the Newsom office has provided a statement that supports the CIF decision to amend its eligibility policy for the championship event this weekend.

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