AGs from 15 states sue to block attacks on medically necessary care for transgender youth

Madison Mayor Satya Rhodes-Conway and other Wisconsinites took part in a city celebration for Transgender Day of Visibility in March. Wisconsin and 14 other states are suing in opposition to a Trump administration executive order blocking gender-affirming care for people under 19. (Photo by Baylor Spears/Wisconsin Examiner)
A coalition including 15 state attorneys general have filed a multistate lawsuit challenging the Trump administrationβs effort to restrict access to medically-necessary care for transgender, intersex and nonbinary youth.
The lawsuit challenges recent federal action to deter doctors and medical providers from offering gender affirming care to youth under the age of 19 years old, including states like Michigan where that care is legal and protected.
Joining the suit are the attorneys general of Michigan, New York, California, Massachusetts, Illinois, and Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Rhode Island, Wisconsin, and the District of Columbia, as well as Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro.
βThe Trump administration shouldnβt be interfering with the provision of health care,β said Wisconsin Attorney General Josh Kaul in a statement Friday.Β βThe administration should be respecting individual liberty and equal rights, not shamefully targeting transgender people.β
The attorneys general have asserted that President Donald Trumpβs White House is overstepping its authority, using threats of criminal prosecution and federal investigations to pressure health care providers.
βThe Trump Administration is attempting to strip away lawful, essential healthcare from vulnerable youth. These orders are illegal and dangerous and have no medical or scientific basis,β said Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel in a statement. βI will continue to protect families, defend doctors, and stop politicians from putting our kidsβ lives at risk.β
Trump in the beginning of his second administration signed an executive order stating that the U.S. would only recognize two sexes, and called for an end to what Trump labeled βgender ideology.β A second order focused on medical restrictions, directing the U.S. Department of Justice to pursue enforcement actions related to that care.
Since then, Nesselβs office said the Department of Justice has issued subpoenas to providers under the guise of criminal law enforcement, but the attorneys general filing the lawsuit Friday argue those efforts lack legal standing and are intended only to intimidate.
βHealth care decisions for kids should be made by parents and doctors, not by politicians,β said Erin Knott, executive director of Equality Michigan, a LGBTQ+ advocacy group, in a statement. βThe federal government is using funding as a weapon to force providers to abandon their patients and override parentsβ rights to make health care decisions for their own children.β
Patricia Wells, a doctor and the medical director of The Corner Health Center in Ypsilanti, Michigan, said in a statement that she and her colleagues are distressed by new punitive changes to funding and regulations, which threaten to dismantle essential care.
βThese policies do not protect children; they endanger them,β Wells said. βThey undermine trust in the medical system and place affirming providers in an impossible position, forcing hospitals to close clinics and providers to stop offering the very care that helps young people survive and thrive. The loss of these services would not simply be a policy failure; it would be a moral one.β
Wells said the nation must do better.
βThese young people deserve our compassion, our evidence-based care, and our unwavering commitment to their well-being,β she said. βI applaud the leadership of the state of Michigan for protecting transgender and gender nonconforming youth, their families, and the caregivers who are saving lives every day.β
Erik Gunn of Wisconsin Examiner contributed to this report.
Michigan Advance is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Michigan Advance maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jon King for questions: info@michiganadvance.com.
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