Appeals court sides with Trump on
transgender military ban, by Rebecca Kheel, 1/4/19, The Hill.
A federal appeals court on
Friday overturned a lower court’s ruling blocking President Trump’s ban on transgender people serving in the military from taking
effect.
The ruling hands Trump a
win in a case that has seen several courts block the policy. But the policy
still cannot take effect because of those other injunctions, which applied
nationwide.
“Although today’s decision
is not a final determination on the merits, we must recognize that the Mattis
Plan plausibly relies upon the ‘considered professional judgment’ of ‘appropriate
military officials’ ... and appears to permit some transgender individuals to
serve in the military consistent with established military mental health, physical health, and sex-based
standards,” wrote a three-judge panel on the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.
“In light of the
substantial constitutional arguments and the apparent showing that the policy
accommodates at least some of plaintiffs’ interests, we think that the public
interest weighs in favor of dissolving the injunction.”
Trump announced over
Twitter in July 2017 that he intended to ban all transgender people from
serving in the military.
Four lawsuits were filed against
the ban, and lower courts in all four cases had blocked the policy from taking
effect as the suits work their way through the legal system.
In March, then-Defense
Secretary James Mattis released an
implementation plan for Trump’s policy that would allow transgender people to
serve if they do so in their biological sex.
The Trump administration
then asked courts to dissolve their injunctions, arguing the Mattis plan is not
a blanket ban on transgender people.
On Friday, the appeals
court panel ruled that District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly made a “clear
error” in deciding that the injunction should stay in place because the Mattis
plan was no different from Trump’s policy.
The appeals court said
Mattis’s plan was not “foreordained” by Trump because it took into account a panel of military
and medical experts, evidence from the implementation of the open service
policy and “a reassessment of the priorities of the group that produced” the
open service policy.
The appeals court also
agreed with the administration that the Mattis plan is not a blanket ban. “Although
the Mattis Plan continues to bar many transgender persons from joining or
serving in the military, the record indicates that the plan allows some
transgender persons barred under the military’s standards prior to the [open
service policy] to join and serve in the military,” the judges wrote.
The plaintiffs in the
lawsuit, the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR) and GLBTQ Legal
Advocates & Defenders, vowed to keep fighting the ban.
“Today’s ruling is a
devastating slap in the face to transgender service members who have proved
their fitness to serve and their dedication to this country,” NCLR legal
director Shannon Minter said in a statement. “We will keep fighting this cruel
and irrational policy, which serves no purpose other than to weaken the
military and punish transgender service members for their patriotism and
service.”
The Department of Justice
also previously asked the Supreme Court to wade into the legal dispute before
any appeals court had reviewed the issue. In leapfrogging regular judicial
order, Solicitor General Noel Francisco asked the justices in November to hear
its appeal of the district court rulings against the ban this term.
Three weeks later,
Francisco then went back to the court seeking an emergency order that would
allow the ban to take effect while the cases are being litigated.
Lydia Wheeler contributed
https://thehill.com/policy/defense/423862-appeals-court-sides-with-trump-on-transgender-military-ban
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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