U.S. President Donald Trump has revoked federal guidelines that allowed transgender students to use bathrooms of their choice, dealing what advocates say is a wrenching blow to LGBT rights.
The move reverses an initiative of former President Barack Obama, who instructed public schools last year to let transgender students use bathrooms matching their chosen gender identity.
The Trump administration says the earlier guidance caused confusion and left open the way to legal challenges. It also says states and public schools should have the authority to make decisions without federal interference.
Here are some expert views on the issue:
RODDY FLYNN, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, CONGRESSIONAL LGBT EQUALITY CAUCUS
โPresident Trumpโs decision to rescind this guidance is cruel. This president, who previously promised to maintain LGBT nondiscrimination protections, has turned his back on the transgender community and shown a willful disregard for the safety of transgender students everywhere.โ
REBECCA ISAACS, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, EQUALITY FEDERATION
โWe stand with transgender students and their families in strong resistance to bullying, even when it comes from the White House. The nationโs leading educators and child health experts agree that it is best for all students when transgender students are treated consistently as the gender that matches how they live every day.โ
JOSEPH MURRAY, ADMINISTRATOR, LGBTRUMP
โPresident Trump has done more to extend an olive branch to the LGBT community than any Republican president before him. But as President Trump is working to build broad-based coalition devoid of identity politics, LGBT foes are using red herrings, such as this bathroom battle, to thwart his efforts.โ
RACHEL TIVEN, CHIEF EXECUTIVE, LAMBDA LEGAL
โTrumpโs actions do not change the law itself โ transgender students remain protected by Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 โ but abandoning the guidance intentionally creates confusion about what federal law requires. The law bars discrimination โ the new administration invites it.โ
KEN PAXTON, ATTORNEY GENERAL, TEXAS
โOur fight over the bathroom directive has always been about former President Obamaโs attempt to bypass Congress and rewrite the laws to fit his political agenda for radical social change. The Obama administrationโs directive on bathrooms unlawfully invaded areas that are left to state discretion under the Tenth Amendment. School policy should centre on the safety, privacy and dignity of its students, not the whims federal of bureaucrats.โ
SHANNON GILREATH, PROFESSOR OF LAW AND PROFESSOR OF WOMENโS, GENDER, AND SEXUALITY STUDIES, WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY
โI think the decision is regrettable primarily because there is no policy to take its place. However, the Obama administration policy was also misguided. It simply amounted to more gender policing: boys go here; girls go here. The only difference from the status quo was that the definitions of girl and boy were in flux. I want a policy that requires more gender neutral, single-occupancy restrooms and changing facilities. Thatโs the only policy that will ensure that gay youth have an escape from the bullying that is all too frequent in gender-segregated spaces.
TERRY OโNEILL, PRESIDENT, NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR WOMEN
โDonald Trumpโs decision to discriminate against transgender students is a shameful and unconstitutional attack on civil rights and human decency. Title IX is clear โ the federal law prohibits sex-based discrimination in educational programs. Donald Trump, (U.S. Attorney General) Jeff Sessions and (U.S. Secretary of Education) Betsy DeVos are choosing to ignore Title IX in order to please their religious conservative base.โ
Thomson Reuters Foundation โ this charitable arm of Thomson Reuters covers humanitarian news, womenโs rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience. http://news.trust.org