The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
S. Ct. Will Decide: Can States Define Sports Team Eligibility by "Biological Sex Determined at Birth"?
That's the question presented in two companion cases that the Court agreed to hear, Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J. Note an important difference between this case and Skrmetti, which upheld state limits on certain kinds of youth gender medicine: In Skrmetti, the majority held that the state laws didn't discriminate based on sex, but here it's clear that the underlying law does discriminate based on sex, because it provides for separate women's sports teams. The question is whether the state may choose to define sex based on the particular biological criteria that it has selected.
An excerpt from the Ninth Circuit opinion in Little v. Hecox, which the Court will review:
Because the Act subjects only students who wish to participate in female athletic competitions to an intrusive sex verification process and categorically bans transgender girls and women at all levels from competing on "female[ ], women, or girls" teams, and because the State of Idaho failed to adduce any evidence demonstrating that the Act is substantially related to its asserted interests in sex equality and opportunity for women athletes, we affirm the district court's grant of preliminary injunctive relief to Lindsay Hecox….
We recognize that, after decades of women being denied opportunities to meaningfully participate in athletics in this country, many cisgender women athletes reasonably fear being shut out of competition because of transgender athletes who "retain an insurmountable athletic advantage over cisgender women." We also recognize that athletic participation confers on students not just an opportunity to win championships and scholarships, but also the benefits of shared community, teamwork, leadership, and discipline. Excluding transgender youth from sports necessarily means that some transgender youth will be denied those educational benefits.
However, we need not and do not decide the larger question of whether any restriction on transgender participation in sports violates equal protection. Heightened scrutiny analysis is an extraordinarily fact-bound test, and today we simply decide the narrow question of whether the district court, on the record before it, abused its discretion in finding that Lindsay was likely to succeed on the merits of her equal protection claim. Because it did not, we affirm the district court's order granting preliminary injunctive relief as applied to Lindsay, vacate the injunction as applied to non-parties, and remand to the district court to address the scope and clarity of the injunction.
Likewise, here's the introduction to the Fourth Circuit opinion in West Virginia v. B.P.J.:
A West Virginia law originally introduced as the "Save Women's Sports Act" provides that "[a]thletic teams or sports designated for females, women, or girls shall not be open to students of the male sex," while defining "male" as "an individual whose biological sex determined at birth is male." Because West Virginia law and practice have long provided for sex-differentiated sports teams, the Act's sole purpose—and its sole effect—is to prevent transgender girls from playing on girls teams. The question before us is whether the Act may lawfully be applied to prevent a 13-year-old transgender girl who takes puberty blocking medication and has publicly identified as a girl since the third grade from participating in her school's cross country and track teams. We hold it cannot.
On the other side, here's an excerpt from the Question Presented from Idaho's petition in Little v. Hecox:
Women and girls have overcome decades of discrimination to achieve a more equal playing field in many arenas of American life—including sports. Yet in some competitions, female athletes have become bystanders in their own sports as male athletes who identify as female have taken the place of their female competitors—on the field and on the winners' podium.
The Idaho Legislature addressed that injustice by enacting the Fairness in Women's Sports Act, which ensures that women and girls do not have to compete against men and boys no matter how those men and boys identify. The Act—one of 25 such state laws around the country—is consistent with longstanding government policies preserving women's and girls' sports due to the "average real differences" between the sexes….
The question presented is: Whether laws that seek to protect women's and girls' sports by limiting participation to women and girls based on sex violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
And from West Virginia's petition:
Like everywhere else, West Virginia schools offer separate sports teams for boys and girls. The West Virginia Legislature concluded that biological boys should compete on boys' and co-ed teams but not girls' teams. This separation made sense, the Legislature found, because of the "inherent physical differences between biological males and biological females." …
The questions presented are:
1. Whether Title IX prevents a state from consistently designating girls' and boys' sports teams based on biological sex determined at birth.
2. Whether the Equal Protection Clause prevents a state from offering separate boys' and girls' sports teams based on biological sex determined at birth.
Editor's Note: We invite comments and request that they be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of Reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Gee, I wonder how that one will turn out...
Hopefully it will turn out that states can keep men out of women's sports.
Are there any cases of a biological (at birth) female that later turned trans male playing on the boy's team?
While not adding the added trans complications, there are instances of girls/women playing on boys/ men's teams.
The real problem is trans activists and their allies lie. They claim a distinction between sex and gender exists but then demand sex segregated spaces or activities be opened to them because of their gender identity (because how you feel about yourself makes a difference on the field somehow?)
There are certainly “assigned” aka identified female at birth folk who have competed in the female competitions but who have turned out to be male.
Caster Semanya is an obvious example. He has 5 alpha reductase deficiency, which feminises the genitals - but nothing else - in a male. Hence the mistaken identification at birth.
Which highlights the problem with the assigned at birth thing. Sex is “assigned” at conception not at birth. And a cursory visual identification at birth can sometimes be wrong.
"which feminizes the genitals - but nothing else - in a male."
Yup. The testicles don't descent and remain internal, and they have a micropenis. This causes their genitals to superficially resemble girls' genitals when they are young, so they are sometimes raised as girls, but it doesn't make female in any meaningful sense.
At the JV level, sure. Lots of examples. At the level of national or international competition? The only examples I can think of are 'sports' that don't involve much physical fitness. Think bowling, snooker, etc.
I'm kinda shocked the 9th didn't think Idaho had proven the act was "substantially related to its asserted interests in sex equality and opportunity for women athletes".
Why do we have separate boys and girls sports? Because boys and girls are physically different. Why would you want to keep trans-girls off girls teams? Because physically they are boys, and thus physically different than girls. The 9th may as well have ruled that having separate boys and girls sports is illegal.
The real mystery is not judges farting around. It's why so many feminists take the trannies' side.
So a guy has to play on the women's team, or vice versa, because someone made an error at birth? Why not just say biological sex? Why buy into the gender studies BS?
I think in this century mistakes on birth certificates and intersex babies are vanishingly rare compared to boys who want to be girls. Fifty years ago, maybe not.
What happens if a former boy moves into Idaho from a blue state and shows a corrected birth certificate saying female? I remember a comic strip, I think Non Seqitur, where a man was reminded to pack his original birth certficiate in case he wanted to use a toilet on his trip to North Carolina. North Carolina had some language attempting to exclude post-birth gender changes. How would the bathroom police know if the birth certificate showed assigned gender at birth?
Don't adopt their language and their obfuscations. They spent years arguing sex and gender were different, but now they're trying to munge the two back together.
Nothing is "assigned at birth", definitely not gender. Sex is observed and noted.
It doesn't matter because ultimately gender studies BS denies biological reality. The distinction is a motte and bailey for their dishonest arguments.
"the State of Idaho failed to adduce any evidence demonstrating that the Act is substantially related to its asserted interests in sex equality and opportunity for women athletes"
I would think that courts could take judicial notice of average differences between men and women. Not in the Ninth Circuit?
There are guidelines in some higher level sports about what testosterone level makes one a man or a woman. Cut off a man's balls and he gets worse at sports. That's not relevant to the question of whether a boy wearing a skirt should play field hockey with girls.
"Not in the Ninth Circuit?"
They are not biologists/
Caveating my comment on not having not read any of the briefing or the underlying law, but this seems obvious. No person is denied the right to participate in school sports alongside competitors of the same sex as them. Some people are just denied the "right" to participate in a different division of school sports based on their professed sense of self.
A trans-girl is still very much allowed to try out for, and compete in, school sports. She just can't join the division made up of female competitors. And nor can any other male.
{In this comment I use "boys" and "girls" to refer to sex, not gender identity.}
Firstly, if the EP applies to the individual, then intermediate scrutiny applies because but-for being a boy, he could compete in women's only sports.
Secondly, boys are denied the ability to compete against girls in girls-only sports. Girls are not denied the ability to compete against boys in boys-only sports. As such, boys are disfavored and intermediate scrutiny applies even under Alito's standard he articulated in Skrmetti (which rejects the but-for standard).
Why doesn't a normal male boy have the same equal protection claim as a transgender male girl?
My guess is he would have a tougher time winning his case. For him to win, he would likely have to argue the law is facially invalid. In contrast for these plaintiffs to win, they need only argue the law is invalid as applied to trans girls ("girls" referring to gender identity).
Equal protection allows a school to discriminate on sex, but not on gender? Or Equal protection allows you to discriminate on sex when gender is aligned, but not on sex when gender isn't aligned?
That doesn't make sense. There's no principle there being followed.
The EP triggers intermediate scrutiny when there is discrimination on the basis of sex (I assume nothing about gender identity). Whether a law survives that scrutiny could depend on whether the challenge is facial or as applied. It's a fact-specific inquiry.
Well, yeah, if the court finds that women's sports violate the EP, they're cooked. But I doubt they'll find that.
Huh? If WV law provided for sex-differentiated sports teams, the act would not have the effect of preventing boys who say that they're girls from playing on girls' teams.
The Act just clarifies existing law. In that sense, it has no effect.
S. Ct. Will Decide: Will there or will there not be girl's sports?
That's about it. This trannies in women's sports crap may as well erase Title-whatever it is.
Only state forbiddance will allow women's sports to continue!
That's why there are no girls sports in blue states anymore!!
I'm not super gung-ho about transgenders in sports, but you're doing hyperbole again.
Just how many trans HS sports players do you think there are anyhow?
If there are males and females on a sports team is it still a female sports team?
"Just how many trans HS sports players do you think there are anyhow?"
More and more every year.
"CLOVIS, Calif. -- A transgender athlete bested the competition Saturday at the California high school track and field championships to take home gold in the girls' high jump and the triple jump at a meet that has stirred controversy and drawn national attention." ESPN June 1 2025
"A transgender athlete took home first place in a varsity high jump competition at an Oregon high school meet Wednesday, roughly two years after finishing last while competing against junior varsity boys, according to a report." NY Post based on Fox News
Last month in Oregon a boy won the girls 200M and 400M per KATV.
So...girls sports still very much a thing and you follow some weird niche stuff online.
Girls sports are weird niche stuff?
If a competitively mediocre man can declare themselves a woman (lesbian of course) to secure a full ride scholarship why wouldn't they the moment "I say I'm a woman" becomes the metric?
I don't know what being "super gung ho" means, but overall, I'm with John Oliver that this issue has been woefully exaggerated.
I think just letting trans athletes alone will generally not cause any problems. In a few cases, there will be some accommodations and line drawing, but the amount of anti-trans hysteria arising out of it is rather offensive.
If I'm super gung-ho about anything, it's against that.
The trans athletes were being left alone, until all this pro-transgender activism created all these legal issues.
I don't think a ban is a priori a terrible policy, but I agree with you that it's a solution in search of a problem being pushed by GOP melodrama-mongers.
The problem is boys like William (Lia) Thomas ruining girls sports.
Then your side should just sign on to our proposed bills and then we can move on from this trivial and meaningless issue.
A solution in search of a problem that is applied in a way that harms trans people.
Then you're retarded. If I can earn cash and prizes by declaring as a senior citizen or a child in an event why wouldn't I given your self referential criteria?
Will Bonecaller Jackson recuse herself since she doesn't know what a woman is?
I hope that comes up during oral arguments.
>The question is whether the state may choose to define sex based on the particular biological criteria that it has selected.
Eugene,
That is not true. It's whether the state must ignore biological sex when gender identity differs from it.
Biological sex is a matter of immutable fact.
I think I am wrong here. It looks as if it could be cast as an argument over the definition of sex. For the purposes of law does "sex" mean "biological sex", or does "sex" mean "biological sex, gender identity and other related characteristics".
So it's just another shitty stupid word game we're supposed to take seriously.
Just like they did with "tax liability", "tax not a fine", "immigrant", "marriage", "husband", "wife", and now "female" and "male".
In the context of Title IX the statutory meaning of "sex" matters. Because the Equal Rights Amendment is not in effect there is no constitutional definition to govern the equal protection claim. The court can make up any rule of decision it likes, including an ad hoc rule that applies only to student-athletes who identify as female contrary to the opinion of the school district.
I'm sure if left up to a Democrat judge, that's exactly what they'd do. They'd define "sex" in a gerrymandered and twisted way to achieve their end goal.
Yes, the leftists want sex and gender identity collapsed into one not an examination of specific policy.
Judge Jackson, during her Supreme Court confirmation hearings, was asked by Senator Blackburn to define "woman."
“Not in this context. I’m not a biologist,” Jackson said.
Blackburn ridiculed this as some around here do. Jackson replied.
“Senator, I’m not sure what message that sends. If you’re asking me about the legal issues related to it — those are topics that are being hotly discussed, as you say, and could come to the court,” Jackson said before Blackburn cut her off, to explain her view of what message this delivers to young women.
https://perma.cc/2X6Q-ELVZ
The biological and legal definition of "woman" is hotly discussed and a matter that has come to the court.
Different states legally define such terms differently. Before Obergefell, how a state defined the term repeatedly determined what sort of marriage was allowed and what was non-recognized same sex marriage.
The biological and legal issues here are complex, even if some want bumper sticker answers.
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4555608
Was Jackson refusing to answer a biological or legal question? I guess we will find out where she stands when this case is decided next year. She already voted for transgenderism in Skrmetti.
Not much of a"guess". Its 100% sure she will vote to strike the state laws.
Each side is guaranteed at least three votes.
Sotomayor and KBJ will certainly vote to strike down the laws.
But I won’t be shocked if Kagan sides with the majority, or at least concurs in the result.
She refused to join the part of Sotomayor’s Skrmetti dissent which argued pediatric transitioning bans fail intermediate scrutiny and dissented separately.
Might be a hint she’s not as all-in on gender ideology as her liberal colleagues.
As a judge, she is ultimately determining legal questions, and she refused (like the typical nominee does) to prejudge those.
She opened by saying she won't answer a (complex) biological question, but ultimately, it is the legal question she decides.
"a (complex) biological question"
Oh come off it.
Distinguishing men from women is something all humans do every day, and have been doing from the dawn of time.
As others have said, ‘what is a woman’ is a biological question. But not a complex one.
Humans and other organisms are divided by reproductive function into two types. Those adapted to propagate a large-type gamete cell. And those adapted to propagate a small-type gamete cell. Those of the first kind are called “females.” Those of the second kind are called “males.”
A woman is an adult female.
Fuck off. There is no complex biological discussion when it comes to trans which is 100% a state of personal belief.
It is only "hotly debated" because you Leftist retards have decided on a definitioneless world from which to attack reality (but only when it suits you). Sorry comrade but the world has generally awoken to your emotionally manipulative and dishonest BS.
There is no such thing as a "trans-woman".
He is a man.
The earth is not flat.
These idiot judges may as well rule that "equity" required the sun to rise in the west every other day.
I wouldn't apply intermediate scrutiny because the discrimination is not invidious. However, even if intermediate scrutiny applies, I think it easily passes. Having female sports teams is a compelling state interest which can be destroyed when a male simply declares that he is a female to participate on the team.
I don't see the Court really struggling with this, except for the Jackson, Kagan, and Sotomayor freak out.
Yes, probably the same 6-3 vote as in Skrmetti, against the transgender lobby.
Intermediate scrutiny looks for an important state interest. I would not call a girls' sports team a compelling interest.
Men who want to play in women's sports do so as a power trip and a desire to dominate women. The Penn State swimmer, Thomas, couldn't even rank in the top 500 in male college swimmers, but easily won in the women's league because of his greater lung capacity and superior upper body strength.
His insistence in competing against women, and especially insisting on changing in their locker room in their presence is an obvious domination tactic. I wouldn't be surprised in the future to hear of him being charged with sexual assault against a women. He'll want another trophy to replace the one he lost.
Did you see where Penn settled its Title IX case by striking his records and agreeing to apologize to every woman he cheated?
Only West Virginia raises the Title IX question. 34 CFR 106.41(b) explicitly allows "separate teams for members of each sex." The meaning of sex in the regulations ought to be the same as in the statute. The Supreme Court should ask what Congress intended over 50 years ago.
Congress said sex to mean sex. The legal question is whether judges can redefine it as self-chosen gender identity.
The Bostock court assumed sex meant the traditional biological-based meaning in Title VII. I expect the Court to do likewise for Title IX. Nonetheless, it would be the case that the statute classifies on the basis of sex and therefore is presumptively impermissible Title IX discrimination. Now perhaps the state can rebut that presumption, but it must do so as applied to a boy (sex) who identifies as a girl rather than boys in general.
Next up: suing over different weight classes in wrestling. Quit body shaming!
Prominent Trans person Briana Wu on what the trans movement ought to do:
1. Admit that much of the increase in trans people is due to social contagion.
2. End self ID...
3. Apologize for allowing trans women in women's sports.
She makes some good points (I agree at least in part on each of them). However, there will remain great swaths of dehumanizing and cruelty towards trans people. These are edge issues that do not conceal the opposition to all trans rights.
The Fourth Circuit and Ninth Circuit each recognize transgender status as a quasi-suspect class. On that issue in Skrmetti, SCOTUS delivered a punt that Ray Guy would envy.
If the Court were to rule that the Idaho and West Virginia regulations survive intermediate scrutiny because promoting fairness (or perceived fairness) in interscholastic athletic competition is an important governmental interest which is furthered by the challenged regulations, I wouldn't shed any tears.
I don't anticipate, though, that that is where these cases are going.
You're like the Jim Cramer of legal predictions.
"The Fourth Circuit and Ninth Circuit each recognize transgender status as a quasi-suspect class."
The Fourth Circuit and Ninth Circuit had to do some Olympic-level women's gymnastics to characterize these laws as creating a classification based on transgender status.
I think the most likely outcome is 1) intermediate scrutiny applies because as Eugene put it, "here it's clear that the underlying law does discriminate based on sex," 2) the Court reaches that conclusion without weighing in on whether transgender status is a quasi-suspect classification, and 3) the laws are upheld.
What do you expect?
I think one of the conspirators noted it’s unlikely the court will ever reach the issue of whether trans is a protected class because no law facially discriminates on the basis of “gender identity.” By their terms the challenged laws all discriminate on the basis of either sex or some other category.
In any event, the gender ideology movement now defines ‘trans’ so broadly - basically as anyone who’s gender-nonconforming - that I don’t know how you could argue it’s a discrete and ascertainable enough group to be protected.
Why should the Supreme Court review mere preliminary injunctions on difficult and divisive cases of first impression? Let the courts below develop a complete record and reach a final decision on the merits before entertaining the case.
Why the rush to judgment?
The level of sophistry that certain of our institutions were able to create that got several courts to declare that a fairly mainstream institution like women's sports is unconstitutional is quite impressive.
Yet another reason to defund these institutions as soon as possible.