Trump Administration Sues Maine Over Transgender Sports Policy

The Trump administration has launched a federal lawsuit against Maine’s education department, accusing the state of defying its directive to ban transgender girls from participating in female sports. The legal move marks a sharp escalation in a nationwide debate over Title IX and how it applies to gender identity in school athletics.

This latest development follows a string of confrontations between President Donald Trump’s Republican-led administration and Democratic Maine Governor Janet Mills. The tension reached a boiling point when Trump threatened to cut off vital federal funds, prompting Mills to fire back with a bold declaration: “We’ll see you in court.”

Attorney General Pam Bondi, speaking at a press event alongside Riley Gaines, a former University of Kentucky swimmer and vocal opponent of transgender inclusion in female sports, vowed to defend what she described as fairness for women in athletics. “We are going to continue to fight for women,” she emphasized.

The administration contends that Maine is in violation of the federal Title IX law, which prohibits sex-based discrimination in education. The interpretation under Trump’s team is that “sex” refers strictly to biological sex assigned at birth, not gender identity.

This stance differs significantly from that of Democratic administrations, which have supported broader civil rights protections for transgender individuals.

Under President Biden, for example, the Department of Justice in 2016 sued North Carolina over a law requiring transgender people to use facilities based on their birth certificate. That inclusive approach has now been reversed.

In February, Trump signed an executive order titled “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports,” giving federal agencies the authority to withhold funding from schools that allow transgender athletes in girls’ sports. Gaines and other female athletes stood by him during the signing, highlighting their belief that allowing transgender girls to compete compromises fairness in women’s sports.

Maine’s officials, however, have refused to settle with the administration. They argue that the law does not explicitly prevent schools from including transgender athletes. Assistant Attorney General Sarah Foster stated in a letter that there is no federal statute barring transgender participation in school sports.

The legal standoff intensified after the U.S. Department of Agriculture withheld funds from Maine’s educational programs, prompting the state to sue. A federal judge later ordered those funds, intended for child nutrition, to be released, dealing a temporary blow to the Trump administration’s pressure tactics.

Across the country, the rights of transgender students have become a flashpoint in cultural and political debates. As of now, 26 states have introduced or passed legislation restricting transgender girls from joining girls’ school sports teams. GOP-led states are also enacting laws to limit gender-affirming care for minors and access to bathrooms in public schools.

During his 2024 presidential campaign, Trump heavily leaned on these issues, promising to uphold a strict, biology-based definition of sex across all federal policies. His executive orders are now facing multiple legal challenges in various states, setting the stage for a prolonged battle over transgender rights in education and sports.

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