Idaho Becomes First State to Protect Women’s Sports From Transgender Agenda

Idaho Gov. Brad Little has given women athletes
renewed hope. Faced with a politically correct culture that is denying women
the right to a fair playing field in sports, the Republican governor signed
into law new protections for them.

Recognizing “inherent differences between men and women,” Idaho’s Fairness in Women’s Sports Act provides that “athletic teams or sports designated for females, women, or girls shall not be open to students of the male sex.”

The measure, which Little signed into law Monday, applies
to all of the state’s interscholastic, intercollegiate, intramural, and club
teams at the high school and college levels.

Idaho is the first state to prevail against forces working
to stop similar bills across the country that seek to right the wrong girls
face when state policies force them to compete in women’s sports against
athletes who are biological males.    

Getting this bill across the finish line wasn’t easy.

Proponents led by state Rep. Barbara Ehardt, a former Division 1 athlete and coach, bucked powerful activists in the business community, including Chobani, Clif Bar & Co., HP Inc., and Micron Technology Inc. But legislators overwhelmingly sided with female athletes and all who support them—moms, dads, coaches, fans, and Idaho citizens, including my parents and extended family. 

Little and state legislators rejected the threats of corporate
activists who, in the name of “diversity and inclusion,” claim without proof
that laws recognizing birth sex as a biological fact will cost the state
business. 

What big business ignores is the opportunities lost in sports for women and girls. Its social justice agenda drowns out the voices of women who should be protected under sex discrimination laws, not exploited by them.    

To their enormous credit, Idaho leaders withstood the
pressure and have paved the way for other states to follow.  

Proponents should be emboldened by U.S. Attorney
General William Barr, who recently intervened in a related federal court case
to state emphatically that Title IX prohibits the injustice in women’s sports
condoned by corporate activists.

On March 24, the Justice Department filed a Statement
of Interest
in a Connecticut lawsuit challenging that state’s
participation rules in sports.

High school athletes Selina Soule, Chelsea Mitchell, and Alanna Smith have faced the sting of defeat and been denied state titles in girls track because they had to compete with biological males. The Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference requires schools to allow athletes to participate in sports according to the “gender” with which they publicly identify. 

For the past several seasons, Connecticut has allowed male
runners to compete and win as transgender athletes in girls track. In fact, female
athletes in every state in the Northeast region have been forced to compete under
the same circumstances and under similar rules. Many also have lost their
rightful place across the finish line and on the podium.         

Congress passed Title IX in 1972 to prohibit
discrimination on the basis of sex, in large part to ensure equal opportunities
in athletics and education for female students. It extends to programs
operated or sponsored by schools receiving federal funding, which includes every
K-12 public school and virtually all colleges and universities in the
country. 

In evaluating the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference’s policy, the Justice Department concluded:

CIAC’s construction of Title IX as requiring the participation of students on athletic teams that reflect their gender identity would turn the statute on its head. One of Title IX’s core purposes is to ensure that women have an ‘equal athletic opportunity’ to participate in school athletic programs. … Reading Title IX to compel schools to require biological males to compete against biological females in athletic competitions is precisely the type of interpretation that this Court should reject.

The Justice Department’s instruction to the Connecticut federal
court carries a warning for all states to heed. Inherent, physiological differences
between the sexes still matter. Title IX expressly prohibits discrimination on
the basis of sex and is being violated by schools and state policies that allow
male athletes to compete in women’s sports. 

The Justice Department’s action has dignified Little’s bold action
to enact the Fairness in Women’s Sports Act, which will protect equal
opportunity in sports for female athletes in Idaho.

Other states have the opportunity, and responsibility, to get
on track.   

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