Less than two weeks after the Obama administration told the nation’s public schools that they must honor the choices of transgender students, 11 states filed a lawsuit in federal court Wednesday to block the directive.
The ACLU labeled the lawsuit “a political stunt,” and some legal experts said it was filed too soon, though they add the issue is soon to be properly heard before the courts.
Led by Texas, the states said the federal government is turning schools and workplaces “into laboratories for a massive social experiment” and “running roughshod over commonsense policies protecting children and basic privacy rights.”
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Eight of the other states on the lawsuit are led by Republican governors — Alabama, Arizona, Georgia, Maine, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Wisconsin, and Utah. The other two have Democratic governors — Louisiana and West Virginia.
They’re asking a federal judge to invalidate a Department of Education notice to schools that they must honor a student’s declared gender identity. And the states challenge a memo from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission advising employers that denying employees access to a restroom corresponding to their gender identity amounts to illegal sex discrimination.
“Schools are facing the potential loss of school funding for simply following commonsense policies that protect their students,” said Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.
The lawsuit says that while civil rights laws governing schools and employers outlaw sex discrimination, the laws refer only “to one’s biological sex, as male or female, and not the radical re-authoring of the term not being foisted upon Americans by the collective efforts” of the federal government.
But the ACLU’s James Esseks called the lawsuit an attack on transgender people.








