The Supreme Court has ruled that the states may prevent transgender girls from competing with other girls on the soccer, basketball and other teams. This ruling interprets Title IX (the educational discrimination statute) and the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution.
The case is West Virginia v. BPJ, issued on June 30. The transgender/sports question has found its way into the culture wars. It used to be gay rights, but those issues -- at least in the marriage and employment context -- are settled. The Court ruled in 2015 that the Equal Protection Clause requires the states to recognize same-sex marriage, and it ruled in 2020 that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 makes it illegal to fire gay and transgender employees.
But Title IX sports is a different issue, the Court says, because when the statute was enacted in 1972 and then amended over the years, Congress intended that the sex assigned at birth is your sex for purposes of high school sports. In addition, says Justice Kavanaugh writing for the majority, regulations issued under Title IX recognize that biological differences between men and women will have an effect on competitiveness and safety if we are talking about contact sports. As for safety, consider the injury risks if we allow transgender girls compete in girls' sports. As for competitiveness, Kavanaugh says, consider how sports is a zero-sum game, where roster spots are finite and a biological male may take the place of someone else on the girls' soccer team.
The equal protection argument carries a different analysis, but the same result. Under equal protection principles, discrimination on the basis of sex is only legal if the government advances an important justification for the discrimination, and the policy in placed is substantially related to that legitimate interest. We call that "intermediate scrutiny." As opposed to "strict scrutiny" in reviewing racial distinctions created by statute or regulations. The Court says that student safety and competitive fairness principles represent important governmental interests, at least when it comes to high school sports. And the refusal to allow transgender girls to play on the girls' teams is substantially related to that governmental interest. May sex-based classifications fails under intermediate scrutiny, but not this one. Kavanaugh positions himself as an authority on youth sports, and recall he coached girls' basketball before he joined the Supreme Court. He recognizes the joys and anguish of high school sports and says that "anyone who thinks that [soccer, basketball, field hockey, lacrosse, and ice hockey] are not contact sports has not witnessed a game recently." Take it from Kavanaugh, these sports are not for the faint of heart.
A brief concurrence from Justice Thomas makes his clear his skepticism of all the issues relating to transgender status, stating that "'gender dysphoria' is a mutable mental state that is the object of psychiatric treatment," and that "Men and boys with gender dysphoria are not women or girls, even if they think they are." To play around with the definitions for boys and girls and man and woman is to "obscure reality" and to "lie to the public and cease to treat or fellow citizens 'as equals.'" It's a "no" from Justice Thomas on this issue.
Justice Sotomayer dissents on the equal protection issue, claiming the majority is jumping the gun and should have remanded this case for more fact-finding on the legal and factual issues.
This litigation implicates deeply sensitive, contentious, and evolving issues. These circumstances demand exercising judicial restraint, not rushing to answer conclusively difficult questions without sufficient evidentiary development. In opting otherwise, the majority extends great sympathy to those it favors: the young cisgender girls and women who play sports. I share that sympathy. Playing sports can lead to benefits that are immeasurable, and many are understandably invested in ensuring that competition stays fair and safe. Because the majority, however, inflicts a hardship on those it disfavors without giving them the fair and full opportunity the Constitution requires to litigate their contentions, I respectfully dissent.