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Advocacy groups ready to challenge Trump’s transgender troop ban in court

Advocacy groups ready to challenge Trump’s transgender troop ban in court
President Donald Trump signed an executive order Monday night that among other things could lead to *** transgender ban in the military, roll back diversity programs, reinstate military members who refused the COVID-19 vaccine, and develop *** space-based missile defense system. President Donald Trump meeting with House Republicans at his Miami golf resort, charting their path forward. We're forging *** new political majority that's shattering and replacing Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal coalition. That vision seeks to cut taxes, pass border security funding, and expand domestic oil production. But perhaps most pressing, passing *** government spending bill by March. We are going to bring forward the America first agenda. Even without Congress, the president has wasted no time. We have no apologies, and we're moving forward very fast. So far he has taken more than 350 executive actions, the latest signed Monday night, including one that looks to scrub any vestiges of diversity, equity and inclusion from the Defense Department. The president also firing Justice Department prosecutors who investigated him and more than *** dozen inspectors general or government agency watchdogs without proper due notice. This is *** chilling, potentially unlawful decision by by the president. It's *** reminder that if there's if there's anything President Trump fears most, it's accountability. And the president getting *** key member of his cabinet yesterday as the Senate confirmed Scott Besant as the Treasury secretary in Washington, I'm Christopher Seas.
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Advocacy groups ready to challenge Trump’s transgender troop ban in court
Advocacy groups are set to file the first lawsuit Tuesday challenging President Donald Trump’s executive order for the Pentagon to revise its policy on transgender troops, likely setting up a ban on their service in the armed forces.It is the same legal team that spent years fighting Trump's ban on transgender troops in his first administration, tying it up in the courts before then-President Joe Biden scrapped it when he took office.Trump’s new order, signed Monday, claims the sexual identity of transgender service members “conflicts with a soldier’s commitment to an honorable, truthful, and disciplined lifestyle” and is harmful to military readiness. It requires Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to issue a revised policy.“The law is very clear that the government can’t base policies on disapproval of particular groups of people," said Shannon Minter, legal director for the National Center for Lesbian Rights. "That’s animus. And animus-based laws are presumed to be invalid and unconstitutional.”In response, the NCLR and GLAD Law are filing a challenge to the executive order Tuesday in the U.S. District Court of the District of Columbia, Minter said.The groups also are challenging the executive order on the basis of equal protection.The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Advocacy groups are set to file the first lawsuit Tuesday challenging President Donald Trump’s executive order for the Pentagon to revise its policy on transgender troops, likely setting up a ban on their service in the armed forces.

It is the same legal team that spent years fighting Trump's ban on transgender troops in his first administration, tying it up in the courts before then-President Joe Biden scrapped it when he took office.

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Trump’s new order, signed Monday, claims the sexual identity of transgender service members “conflicts with a soldier’s commitment to an honorable, truthful, and disciplined lifestyle” and is harmful to military readiness. It requires Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to issue a revised policy.

“The law is very clear that the government can’t base policies on disapproval of particular groups of people," said Shannon Minter, legal director for the National Center for Lesbian Rights. "That’s animus. And animus-based laws are presumed to be invalid and unconstitutional.”

In response, the NCLR and GLAD Law are filing a challenge to the executive order Tuesday in the U.S. District Court of the District of Columbia, Minter said.

The groups also are challenging the executive order on the basis of equal protection.

The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.