Trump administration seeks to dismiss lawsuit by New Hampshire transgender teens
The U.S. Justice Department is defending itself against two New Hampshire transgender high school students who allege that President Donald Trump's executive orders earlier this year would unconstitutionally deprive them of playing girls' sports.
In a June 6 filing, Deputy Assistant Attorney General Richard Lawson argued the two students, Parker Tirrell and Iris Turmelle, had not established an imminent risk of being affected by the executive orders. And he contended that even if the executive order did affect the students, the administration's intent — to prevent transgender girls from playing girls' sports — is lawful.
'… The Sports Order's classification is rationally related to the physical advantages of males in sports and serves the legitimate government purpose of ensuring equal opportunities for females,' Lawson wrote.
The filing comes as Tirrell and Turmelle are suing the state of New Hampshire in federal court to overturn House Bill 1205, a 2024 New Hampshire law that limits middle school and high school girls' sports teams to children who were female at birth. That law would prevent Tirrell and Turmelle, both transgender girls, from participating on their sports teams.
In September, Judge Landya McCafferty of the U.S. District Court of New Hampshire issued a preliminary injunction that temporarily stops HB 1205 from applying to Tirrell and Turmelle, allowing them to continue playing while the case proceeds. That order does not apply to other transgender students in the state.
But while the state law is temporarily frozen, lawyers for Tirrell and Turmelle argue Trump's executive orders this year pose a new threat. Those orders, titled 'Defending Women from Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government' and 'Keeping Men out of Women's Sports,' require the Department of Education to interpret Title IX, the law prohibiting sex-based discrimination in schools, to exclude transgender female athletes from female sports and warn school districts to align their policies to that interpretation or lose federal funding.
In February, attorneys for Turmelle and Tirrell filed a motion to expand their lawsuit against the state to also include the Trump administration, and specifically asked the New Hampshire District Court to strike down Trump's executive orders.
In its recent response, the Trump administration argues there is no evidence that the president's executive orders have affected Tirrell or Turmelle yet, and that the lawsuit seeking to stop those orders should thus be dismissed. Without that direct harm, plaintiffs have failed to state a proper claim for a lawsuit, defendants wrote.
'Plaintiffs lack constitutional standing, and their stated speculative risk of future injury is not close to imminent and may never become ripe,' the Department of Justice wrote.
The plaintiffs had argued that the executive order 'to target investigations and rescind federal funding' put the girls' ability to continue playing on girls' sports teams at risk. But the government argues that that alleged threat is not strong enough. And they say the plaintiffs have not met a critical two-part test: to show that the injury is both 'imminent' — meaning it is 'certainly impending' and not just speculative — and 'particularized' — meaning it specifically affects the plaintiffs suing, and not just the general population.
In an interview Monday, Chris Erchull, staff attorney for GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD), rejected the government's contention that the executive orders do not pose a threat to the New Hampshire students.
He pointed to the Trump administration's April lawsuit against the Maine Department of Education, in which the administration argued the state was violating Title IX by allowing transgender students to compete on girls' sports teams. That example, Erchull said, indicates that the administration could easily turn its attention on New Hampshire school districts.
'If they're not challenging the executive order in court, without court protection, the United States Department of Education can and almost certainly will go after the school districts where these two young people play sports and try to cut funding to those schools,' he said.
But the Department of Justice attorneys wrote that any future funding cuts to Turmelle or Tirrell's public schools that might result from Trump's executive order would involve a number of decisions in the future and are 'far too speculative,' the government wrote. The process to cut off Title IX funds to a school district requires the Department of Education to file a notice to the school district, includes a potential hearing, and mandates a full written report to Congress, all of which can take months, the government wrote.
'Plaintiffs here do not (and cannot) plausibly allege that the Agency Defendants have even started this multi-step process for any educational program in New Hampshire, much less the two particular schools that Plaintiffs attend,' the government wrote. 'They do not (and cannot) point to even an initiated investigation in New Hampshire.'
Attorneys with the Justice Department suggested that the U.S. Department of Education might not even bother with investigations into New Hampshire schools, since the state already passed a state law, HB 1205, barring transgender girls from playing girls' sports.
Even if Tirrell and Turmelle are blocked from participating in sports, the executive orders do not violate the Fifth Amendment or Title IX, the government motion argues.
According to the motion, Trump's executive orders are designed to protect women's sports, meaning that they uphold the purpose of Title IX. 'Because of the inherent physiological difference between males and females, the Sports Order's policy of 'oppos[ing] male competitive participation in women's sports' is substantially related to the important government interest of safety, fairness, and ensuring 'women and girls the equal opportunity to participate and excel in competitive sports,'' the motion states.
The government's motion continues by asserting that neither transgender status nor gender identity are protected classes under Title IX. In 2020, the Supreme Court held in Bostock v. Clayton County that gender identity is a protected class under the anti-sex-based discrimination provision of Title VII, in a case relating to employment law. But the Department of Justice says that decision does not apply to Title IX, and that the goal of keeping girls' sports exclusive to cisgender girls is allowed under federal law.
Erchull disagrees.
'When you make a transgender status-based classification, that's a sex-based classification,' he said. 'And we have tons of precedent that says that that is entitled to heightened scrutiny, but what the federal government is saying is that that doesn't count.'
The plaintiffs in the case will likely file a response brief to the government's motion in the coming weeks, and eventually the parties will appear in federal court for oral arguments, Erchull said.
And attorneys on both sides are watching the Supreme Court this month. Justices are expected to issue a decision in United States v. Skrmetti, a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of a Tennessee ban on transgender medical care. The decision could affect how both sides shape their arguments in New Hampshire, Erchull said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox News
13 hours ago
- Fox News
Trans bathroom policies have 10 days to go, Trump Education Department warns 5 Virginia school districts
The Department of Education is giving five northern Virginia school districts ten days to fix their transgender bathroom policies or face "enforcement action," the agency said Friday. Public school districts in Loudoun County, Fairfax County, Prince William County, Alexandria City and Arlington were all found to be in violation of Title IX after an investigation by the Education Department's Office of Civil Rights that began in February, according to a press release shared Friday. The release cited a June ruling by the Supreme Court, which the department said acknowledged that a person's identification as "transgender" is distinct from a person's biological sex. "The investigation was based on complaints alleging that the [school districts] have similar anti-discrimination policies pertaining to 'transgender-identifying' students, which violate the sex-based protections of Title IX," the release said. "The [districts] are also the subject of several lawsuits, informal complaints and reports, which allege that students in the (districts) avoid using school restrooms whenever possible because of the schools' policies and that female students have witnessed male students inappropriately touching other students and watching female students change in a female locker room." Craig Trainor, the Department of Education's acting assistant secretary for civil rights, blasted the Biden administration for tolerating such behavior, adding it's time for "northern Virginia's experiment with radical gender ideology" to come to an end. The Education Department's non-compliance finding prompted the agency to issue a proposed resolution agreement whereby each school district can take corrective action to prevent any enforcement actions by the Trump administration. That action would require the districts to rescind any policies or regulations allowing students to access bathrooms, locker rooms or other intimate facilities on the basis of their preferred gender identity as opposed to their biological sex. The districts will also be required under the agreement to issue letters to each school it oversees within its district, explaining that any future policies related to bathrooms, locker rooms or other intimate spaces must separate students on the basis of sex and not gender identity. The districts would also be compelled under the agreement to adopt "biology-based definitions" of the words "male" and "female" to be used in all practices and policies. The Department of Education gave the school districts 10 days to voluntarily agree to these demands or risk "imminent" consequences, including a potential referral to the Department of Justice. "Today, we at Defending Education are incredibly gratified to learn that a group of Northern Virginia School Districts — many of which were ground zero for the social experimentation of transgender 'inclusion' in women's sports, bathrooms and private spaces — are now facing the music for failing to adhere to the plain text and meaning of Title IX," said Sarah Parshall Perry, vice president and legal fellow at Defending Education. "As a mother, as a Virginian and as former senior counsel to the assistant secretary for civil rights at the U.S. Department of Education, I am encouraged to see that this administration is taking the enforcement of long-standing civil rights laws seriously," Perry continued. "Title IX was passed to guarantee women's educational equality in its myriad manifestations. But intransigent schools in the commonwealth seem to have forgotten that." The school districts all confirmed receipt of the resolution agreements issued to them by the Department of Education and are conducting a review to determine next steps. They all also expressed a commitment to following federal and state laws while simultaneously fostering a welcoming, inclusive and supportive environment for students.

Epoch Times
16 hours ago
- Epoch Times
Trump Admin Launches Federal Probe Into Oregon Policies Allowing Male Participation in Girls' Sports
The Department of Education's civil rights office has opened an investigation into Oregon's policies allowing transgender-identifying male students to compete in female athletics based on a 'gender identity' participation policy. The Education Department said in a July 25 press release that its Office for Civil Rights is examining whether the Oregon Department of Education (ODE) is violating Title IX, the federal law barring sex discrimination in education programs that receive federal funds.


USA Today
16 hours ago
- USA Today
Ivy League colleges face a reckoning after Columbia's Trump deal
Other prestigious universities, from Harvard to Penn, have taken vastly different approaches to dealing with pressure from the White House. WASHINGTON – It's a rough time to be the president of an Ivy League university. Although President Donald Trump graduated from one, he's made it clear he won't tolerate the liberal slant he sees at America's most prestigious colleges – and that he intends to reshape them accordingly. His administration's unprecedented deal with Columbia University in New York City has put many of its Ivy League peers in a tough spot. To shake the target off its back and unpause research funding, Columbia agreed on July 23 to pay fines of more than $220 million (and signed on to a sprawling list of other concessions related to admissions, academics and hiring practices). The accord has unnerved leaders at college campuses across the country. "This has opened up a Pandora's box," said Scott Schneider, an attorney and expert in higher education law. Read more: The details of Columbia's extraordinary $220 million deal with Trump, explained Trump, who has halted billions in research grants to a slew of schools, has said he envisions the Columbia deal as the first of many such agreements. His education secretary, Linda McMahon, called it a blueprint for other institutions to follow. Read more: After $220 million Columbia deal, Trump promises more to come "Columbia's reforms are a roadmap for elite universities that wish to regain the confidence of the American public," she said in a statement. While it's unclear whether the agreement has set a new precedent, the Trump administration is pushing for other colleges to pay similar types of fines, a White House official confirmed to USA TODAY. Some onlookers, including Larry Summers, a former president of Harvard, have lauded the deal. He called it an "excellent template" for resolutions with the administration. But critics such as Brendan Cantwell, a higher education professor at Michigan State University, believe the short-term benefits of conceding to broad demands from the Trump administration are not worth the long-term implications of redefining the relationship between the federal government and higher education. Still, he understands the arguments of people like Summers. When colleges choose to fight, he acknowledged, "individual people are going to be hurt." "And maybe that's an unacceptable cost," he said. Trump's other deal: the University of Pennsylvania Columbia isn't the only Ivy League school to strike a deal with the Trump administration this summer. On July 1, the University of Pennsylvania, the president's alma mater in Philadelphia, entered into an agreement ending a civil rights investigation brought by the U.S. Department of Education. In February, the agency accused Penn of violating Title IX, the primary sex discrimination law governing schools, when it allowed Lia Thomas, a transgender swimmer, to compete in 2022. By March, professors were told their research projects had lost funding. The school's president said $175 million in grants and programs had been jeopardized. As part of the deal, the White House said it would restore Penn's research funding. In return, the university apologized to cisgender athletes who swam against Thomas. The university also agreed to ban transgender women from sports. (Trans women athletes have been banned from competing on women's teams at National Collegiate Athletic Association schools since February, when new rules were imposed, although the NCAA's policy permits trans men to compete in men's sports.) Read more: Lia Thomas, Title IX and $175M — why Penn struck a deal with Trump Weeks after the deal was announced, many Penn faculty members remain in limbo, unsure about which grants have been revived. "Nobody really knows what was cut and what was restored," said Jonathan Zimmerman, a professor who studies the history of education at the university. "It feels like the theater of the absurd." Harvard keeps fighting Harvard, unlike the other Ivy League campuses immersed in similar conflicts, has continued to battle the Trump administration in court. At a key hearing in Boston on July 21, the university's lawyers urged a federal judge to force the White House to restore billions in funding for the school. Harvard has asked the judge to reach a decision by Sept. 3. But the White House's attacks on Harvard have extended far beyond financial issues: The Trump administration has threatened to revoke its tax-exempt status, tried to ban its ability to enroll international students, warned its accreditor, and considered placing a lien on the university's assets. All the while, Trump has hinted he believes Harvard may still be open to striking a deal. Other colleges in limbo Of the eight schools that make up the Ivy League, only two – Dartmouth College in New Hampshire and Yale University in Connecticut – have avoided targeted federal funding freezes. At Cornell, the government paused more than $1 billion. At Brown, it froze $510 million, and at Princeton stopped more than $210 million. Asked whether their university leaders were negotiating with the Trump administration to restore their funding, spokespeople for Brown, Cornell and Princeton declined to comment or did not respond to requests for comment. Additional agreements with those schools (and others) could happen before the start of the year, according to Robert Kelchen, a higher education professor at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. The Trump administration, plagued by heightened attention to the president's reported ties to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, may be looking for ways to change the narrative, Kelchen said. And some schools might feel incentivized to resolve funding problems before students – and protests – return to campus for the fall. "The whole Epstein thing really has the potential to swamp the administration," he said. "They want victories they can point to." Zachary Schermele is an education reporter for USA TODAY. You can reach him by email at zschermele@ Follow him on X at @ZachSchermele and Bluesky at @