The Biden administration’s attempt to revise Title IX rules to support transgender students faced a significant setback on Thursday when a federal judge in Louisiana permitted four states to block these changes. U.S. District Court Judge Terry Doughty ruled against the Department of Education’s decision that Title IX, originally established in 1972 to prohibit sex discrimination, should compel schools to accommodate transgender students’ needs.
This decision affects Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, and Idaho. Judge Doughty criticized the Biden administration for overstepping its authority, arguing that such changes would have extensive financial implications for schools nationwide. He emphasized that Title IX was designed to protect biological women from discrimination.
Appointed by former President Donald Trump, Judge Doughty contended that the new rules, which the Education Department aimed to use to extend Title IX protections to include gender identity, could undermine the law’s original intent. The new rules would have required schools to allow students to use bathrooms and locker rooms matching their gender identity and to use preferred pronouns, with non-compliance potentially leading to investigations for creating a hostile environment.
In issuing a preliminary injunction, Judge Doughty stopped the rules from being implemented while the case proceeds in court. He stated that these changes could lead to more discrimination against biological females, arguing that the rules did not adequately consider their impact. Doughty expressed concern that allowing individuals who identify as female but have male biological characteristics into female-designated spaces could pose risks related to privacy, embarrassment, and potential sexual assault.
Furthermore, Judge Doughty pointed out that the Education Department’s rules might undermine traditional single-sex institutions and organizations, potentially nullifying long-standing exemptions in Title IX for entities like single-sex colleges and youth organizations. He suggested that the Biden administration’s approach could lead to the erosion of decades of progress made for both men and women.
The judge concluded that the proposed rule would impose a single political ideology on the educational system, marginalizing opposing views and potentially labeling them as harassment under the new standards.