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Exclusive: Attorneys from 27 states and U.S. territories in Guam have signed court cases to support the upcoming defense Supreme Court case Protect women’s sports from trans athletes.
The Supreme Court agreed in July to review the state ban on transgender athletes participating in public school sports. this Two cases It will hear that Idaho’s Little With Hecox and BPJ vs West Virginia’s Little With Hecox, highlights state laws that prevent biomas from competing with women and women’s sports teams.
In the case, the plaintiffs of trans athletes tried to bypass the laws, while the defendants, state authorities in West Virginia and Idaho sought to uphold the laws.
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Now, U.S. territories from Arkansas, Alabama, Alaska, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania, Southwest Grocery Stores, Utah, Virginia and Wyoming, and Guam have left their support behind the defendants, as the copy of the Fox News digital numbers sees.
AGS from Idaho and West Virginia signed only summary of cases not based on their state because they were already defendants in their in-state cases.
“At the heart of these cases is a fundamental question: can states uphold laws that preserve fairness and opportunity for female athletes? The answer must be yes. Across the country, girls and women are once again being asked to overcome structural failures that Title IX was designed to eliminate. This is not about exclusion—it’s about preserving the integrity of female athletics,” Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall said in a statement provided to Fox News Digital.
“We have to protect these opportunities because the law, science and the public will be on our side. We think the courts will be, too.”
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West Virginia enacted the Save Women’s Sports Act in 2021, which attracted a low-level ruling to allow trans athlete Becky Pepper-Jackson to compete in the school Off-road and track the team. Over the past year, Pepper-Jackson has been eligible for track and field competitions at West Virginia Girls High School State, ranking third in the AAA Division and eighth in the discus competition.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit ruled Pepper-Jackson, who is taking adolescent drugs, in an April 2024 ruling under the Constitution’s equal protection clause.
Idaho became the first state in the country to ban trans athletes and women’s sports in 2020. Boise State University Women’s track and field team.
The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the injunction to block Idaho laws in 2023.
Hecox asked the Supreme Court to abandon challenges against Idaho law earlier this month.
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Meanwhile, the Idaho Attorney General Raul Labrador Hopefully the Supreme Court will make a decision that will make a greater impact, not just have a state enforce its own specific laws on the issue. He wants a new national precedent. “I believe that’s what they’re going to do,” Labrador told Fox News’s numbers in an exclusive interview.
“I think they will have a major ruling on whether men can participate in the women’s movement and, more importantly, how to determine whether transgender people are protected by the federal constitution and state and federal laws.”
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