Author Archives: Andreas R. Ziegler

US Supreme Court finds in favor of web designer who refused to create websites for LGBTQ+ couples

US Supreme Court finds in favor of web designer who refused to create websites for LGBTQ+ couples

The US Supreme Court ruled Friday in 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis that a Colorado-based web designer cannot be compelled to create wedding websites for LGBTQ+ couples, despite the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act (CADA) which protects LGBTQ+ people from discrimination in public accommodations. The Court determined that forcing the designer to comply with CADA would violate her First Amendment right to free speech under the US Constitution.

Justice Neil Gorsuch, writing for the majority, emphasized that while anti-discrimination laws are constitutional, it is not constitutional to compel someone to make art, as art is akin to speech. The opinion rests on the precedential case of Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Boston, Inc, in which an LGBTQ+ group was banned from a St. Patrick’s Day Parade and sued under a Massachusetts public accommodation anti-discrimination law. The court found that parade organizers could not be compelled to allow the LGBTQ+ group in the parade because it would violate the parade organizer’s right to free speech. Gorsuch writes, “In Hurley, the Court commented favorably on Massachusetts’ public accommodations law, but made plain it could not be ‘applied to expressive activity’ to compel speech.”

Gorsuch also cited the case Boy Scouts of America v. Dale, where the Court found in favor of a Boy Scout policy banning LGBTQ+ people from participating in scouting, despite a New Jersey public accommodations anti-discrimination law. Gorsuch writes, “In Dale, the Court observed that New Jersey’s public accommodations law had many lawful applications but held that it could ‘not justify such a severe intrusion on the Boy Scouts’ rights to freedom of expressive association.’”

Gorsuch concluded, saying:

Of course, abiding the Constitution’s commitment to the freedom of speech means all of us will encounter ideas we consider “unattractive,” “misguided, or even hurtful.” But tolerance, not coercion, is our Nation’s answer. The First Amendment envisions the United States as a rich and complex place where all persons are free to think and speak as they wish, not as the government demands.

Justices Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented. Justice Sotomayor, writing for the dissent, said:

This case cannot be understood outside of the context in which it arises. In that context, the outcome is even more distressing. The LGBT rights movement has made historic strides, and I am proud of the role this Court recently played in that history. Today, however, we are taking steps backward.

Gorsuch lambasted the dissent, saying, “Today…the dissent abandons what this Court’s cases have recognized time and time again: A commitment to speech for only some messages and some persons is no commitment at all.”

The Alliance for Defending Freedom, a conservative legal organization that assisted the petitioner in the case, celebrated the ruling, saying, “The Court reiterated that it’s unconstitutional for the state to eliminate from the public square ideas it dislikes, including the belief that marriage is the union of husband and wife.” Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser, however, condemned the ruling, saying, “Today’s sweeping decision threatens to destabilize our public marketplace and encourage all kinds of businesses—not just those serving weddings—to claim a First Amendment free speech right to refuse service to certain customers.”

303 Creative LLC revolves around Lorie Smith, a web designer in Colorado who intended on expanding her business to include wedding websites. Smith alleged that if she were to expand her business and refuse to create wedding websites for LGBTQ+ couples, she would be penalized and compelled to create them under CADA. Smith also alleged she received a request for a wedding website from a gay couple. The US District Court District of Colorado sided with the state of Colorado and the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the district court ruling. Smith requested a writ of certiorari to the US Supreme Court in September 2021.

Shortly before the release of the court’s opinion, the New Republic, an online news organization, claimed that there was no gay couple that requested a wedding website from Smith. Melissa Gira Grant, a journalist for the site, called the man who allegedly submitted the request and he claimed it was “the very first time I’ve heard of it.” The submission allegedly included the man’s contact information, however, he is already married. The man said, “I’m married, I have a child—I’m not really sure where that came from? But somebody’s using false information in a Supreme Court filing document.”

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US members of Congress introduce bill to ban ‘gay panic’ defense

US members of Congress introduce bill to ban ‘gay panic’ defense

Senator Edward Markey (D-MA) and Congressman Chris Pappas (D-NH) introduced a bill on Monday that would ban the use of sexual orientation and gender identity-based panic defenses in criminal trials.

Known as the LGBTQ+ Panic Defense Prohibition Act of 2023, the bill would prohibit criminal defendants from using a victim’s sexual orientation or gender identity as an “excuse” or “justification” for their violent behavior. The bill goes on to state findings, including that “panic defenses based on sexual orientation and gender identity or expression… are surprisingly long-lived historical artifacts, remnants of a time when wide-spread public antipathy was the norm for LGBTQ individuals.”

According to The LGBTQ+ Bar, only 16 states and the District of Columbia ban the use of this defense strategy. One report showed 16.7 percent of hate crime victims in 2019 were targeted because of their sexual orientation, and 2.7 percent were targeted for their gender identity.

Markey said of the bill’s introduction, “Members of the LGBTQ+ community, particularly trans people of color, are facing ongoing, escalating, and intensifying violence emboldened by hateful actions and speech by elected officials at every level of government.” This bill was also previously introduced by Markey in 2021.

As Pride Month comes to an end, legislative attacks on LGBTQ+ members—particularly transgender individuals—continue amid efforts to protect those most vulnerable. Recently, a court struck down Arkansas’ ban on gender-affirming care for transgender youth and a judge blocked Indiana’s ban on gender-affirming care.

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Far right in Italy and Spain target rainbow families and flags

Far right in Italy and Spain target rainbow families and flags

Italy is debating a crackdown on surrogate parents, seen as an attack on LGBTI families, while Spain’s far-right party goes after the rainbow flag.

Italian MPs are debating a law that would make it illegal for Italian citizens to engage a surrogate mother in another country, with prison terms of up to three years and fines of up to €1m.

A 2004 law already banned surrogacy in Italy.

The new surrogacy regime is backed by prime minister Georgia Meloni and adds to fears in Italy’s LGBTI community that her far-right government will erode their civil rights.

The proposed ban would also apply to opposite-sex couples, but critics see that as camouflage for its real intention — to stop homosexual couples raising children.

The surrogacy bill comes in a wider context of curbs on non-biological parents, which have already hurt many ‘rainbow families’.

A top court in Italy ruled last year that non-biological parents cannot automatically be listed on children’s birth records, and need to go through the long legal process of adoption in order to be formally recognised.

Some mayors did add non-biological parents when processing birth certificates from abroad, in defiance of the ruling.

And Italian opposition MP Chiara Appendino, who did so when serving as mayor of Turin, warned that the harsh consequences of the new surrogacy law “will be paid by the children”, AP reported.

The prosecutors’ office in the Italian city of Padua this week also demanded that non-biological parents be removed from the birth certificates of 33 children registered to lesbian couples since 2017.

The children can no longer even use their non-biological parent’s surname.

“The Italian decision is monstrous, because it simply amounts to the administrative removal of a child from one of its parents on the grounds of homosexuality,” French liberal MEP Pierre Karleskind said earlier this week.

“We cannot let children be the victims of this despicable far-right crusade against rainbow families,” he said.

‘Deserves the best’

Meloni was raised by a single mother and is herself an unmarried parent.

But she wants to be seen as a defender of Christian values against what she calls “gender ideology” and the “LGBTI lobby”.

“A child deserves only the best: a mother and a father,” she said in March.

But if her anti-LGBTI rhetoric is meant to be populist, that kind of discourse appears to be less and less popular with Italian public opinion.

An Ipsos poll last June showed that 63 percent of Italians backed marriage rights for gay people — up 15 points from 2013.

It also said 59 percent were in favour of gay adoptions — an increase of 17 points from nine years ago, Reuters reported.

The EU has not passed any laws specifically on the rights of rainbow families, as it has no competence in family law in general.

But EU jurisprudence and the political mood in the EU capital also go against Meloni-type anti-rainbow attacks.

“Family law is a national competence,” said EU Commission spokesman Christian Wiegand.

But he also said: “Our position on parental rights in cross-border cases is that if one is a parent in one member state and is recognised as such in one member state, other member states must recognise that parenthood”.

In a landmark ruling, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) said in December 2021 that same-sex parents and their children should be recognised as a family in all EU member states.

More: https://euobserver.com/rule-of-law/157172

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More:https://www.thepinknews.com/2023/07/18/italy-lesbian-mums-removed-birth-certificates

British Cycling to ban transgender women from competing in female category

British Cycling to ban transgender women from competing in female category

Emily Bridges
Emily Bridges previously set a national junior men’s record over 25 miles and was selected to join British Cycling’s senior academy in 2019

By Dan RoanBBC sports editor

Last updated on26 May 2023

26 May 2023.

From the sectionCycling

British Cycling is to ban transgender women from the female category of its competitions following a nine-month review and consultation.

Under a new participation policy that the governing body said was “predicated on fairness”, such athletes will compete in an ‘open category’ with men.

Female races will be “for those whose sex was assigned female at birth”.

The changes will prevent riders such as Emily Bridges potentially being part of the British women’s team.

Last year Bridges – the country’s highest-profile transgender cyclist – was stopped from competing in her first elite women’s race by the UCI, cycling’s world federation, despite meeting the rules at the time.

Bridges reacted to the announcement with a statement on social media, calling the change a “violent act” by a “failed organisation” that was “controlling” the conversation on transgender inclusion.

She added that the racing scene was “dying under its watch” and that British Cycling was engaged in “culture wars”.

British Cycling’s policy had allowed transgender women to take part in elite female events if they met testosterone-based regulations.

But with the governing body at the heart of the debate over balancing inclusion with fairness, its regulations were suspended amid mounting controversy about Bridges and a review was launched.

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“Research studies indicate that even with the suppression of testosterone, transgender women who transition post-puberty retain a performance advantage,” said British Cycling.

“Our aim in creating our policies has always been to advance and promote equality, diversity and inclusion, while at the same time prioritising fairness of competition.

“We recognise the impact the suspension of our policy has had on trans and non-binary people, and we are sorry for the uncertainty and upset that many have felt during this period.”

Transgender women will be able to participate in non-competitive recreational and community cycling without restriction.

The new policies will be implemented by the end of the year.

‘You have no right to tell me when I am done’ – Bridges response

In her statement, Bridges was critical of the state of British Cycling and its treatment of transgender riders.

“Cycling is still one of the whitest, straightest sports out there and you couldn’t care less,” she said. “I agree there needs to be a nuanced policy discussion and continue to conduct research. This hasn’t happened.

“Research isn’t being viewed critically, or any discussion about the relevance of the data to specific sports.

“I’ve given my body up to science for the last two years, and this data will be out soon.

“There is actual, relevant data coming soon and discussions need to be had.”

Bridges claimed discussion of the debate is “inherently political” and “framed by the media who are driven through engagement by hate”, saying she was “terrified to exist”.

She claimed British Cycling was “furthering a genocide against us. Bans from sport is how it starts”.

She added: “I know a lot of people will think I’m being dramatic, or overplaying how scary things are at the moment. I don’t even know if I want to race my bike any more… but you have no right on telling me when I am done.”

British Cycling is not commenting on Bridges’ statement.

What’s the background?

Having been a highly promising competitor in junior men’s events, Bridges came out as transgender in 2020, starting hormone therapy as part of her gender dysphoria treatment.

She then became eligible to compete in elite women’s events under British Cycling’s transgender regulations, which required riders to have had testosterone levels below five nanomoles per litre for a 12-month period prior to competition.

But days before the 2022 National Omnium Championships, the UCI said Bridges’ participation could only be allowed once her eligibility to race in international competitions was confirmed, dashing her hopes of competing for Wales in the Commonwealth Games.

A group of elite female cyclists called on the UCI to “rescind” its rules around transgender participation, claiming female athletes in the UK were “willing to boycott” events over their “concerns about fairness in their sport”.

Bridges said she felt “harassed and demonised” and had “little clarity” on her eligibility. She added that she “does not have any advantage” over her competitors, and could prove it with data.

While British Cycling suspended its rules, the UCI then toughened its regulations, doubling the qualification period to two years and lowering the required testosterone threshold for transgender women riders to 2.5nmol/L.

But this month, after Austin Killips became the first transgender woman to win a UCI women’s stage race at the Tour of the Gila, the world governing body re-opened consultation on the issue, saying it “hears the voices of female athletes and their concerns about an equal playing field for competitors”.

‘Paucity of research’ – British Cycling boss

“We acknowledge the paucity of research at this time, but can only look at what’s available to use,” said British Cycling chief executive Jon Dutton.

“I am confident that we have developed policies that both safeguard the fairness of cycle-sport competition, whilst ensuring all riders have opportunities to participate.

“We have always been very clear that this is a challenge far greater than one sport. We remain committed to listening to our communities, to monitor changes in the scientific and policy landscape, to ensure that sport is inclusive for all.”

Fiona McAnena from Fair Play For Women told BBC Radio 4’s World at One she was “concerned about all the women and girls who need to know that sport will be fair so I think an open category is a great solution because it doesn’t negate anyone’s identity…[and] the female category can be protected.”

“We’re finally reverting to fairness. We are going to see it across all sports.”

However Joanna Harper – a sports scientist who studies the effects of transition on transgender athletes, and who is transgender herself – said she was “disappointed but not surprised”.

“I don’t think it’s necessary” she told BBC Radio 5Live. “Trans women have been competing in cycling for many years…and although they have achieved some success in the sport, they are under-represented and are not anywhere near taking over the sport.”

In March, UK Athletics also banned transgender women from competing in the female category in its competitions and events. There have been similar moves in swimming,triathlon and both codes of rugby.

A number of studies have suggested transgender women retain cardiovascular and strength advantages compared to female athletes, even after taking testosterone-suppressing hormones.

Critics of transgender athletes’ participation in some women’s sports argue that gives them a disproportionate advantage over their peers and limits opportunities for their rivals.

However, others argue there is not enough detailed research in the area, that the science is not clear, and that with very few elite transgender athletes, sport should be more inclusive, with open categories criticised for being discriminatory.

British Cycling said its women-only community programme “will continue to remain open and inclusive for transgender women and non-binary people” who can “continue to participate in a broad range of British Cycling activities in line with their gender identities”.

More: https://www.bbc.com/sport/cycling/65718748#:~:text=British%20Cycling%20is%20to%20ban,’open%20category’%20with%20men.

Interesting Article. The Dynamics of the Debate About Gay Rights: Evidence from US Newspapers

Interesting Article. The Dynamics of the Debate About Gay Rights: Evidence from US Newspapers

Alan Manning , Paolo Masella, The Dynamics of the Debate About Gay Rights: Evidence from US Newspapers, The Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization, Volume 39, Issue 2, July 2023, Pages 456–492, https://doi.org/10.1093/jleo/ewab043

Abstract

Changing attitudes are the result of a battle for hearts and minds in which agents for and against change try to persuade others. We know very little about this process. We develop a methodology for measuring the intensity and the contents of media coverage for and against an idea which we apply to attitudes to gay rights. We uncover several stylized facts: First, the diffusion process of both pro- and anti-gay rights language in the US newspapers follow an S-shaped pattern, characteristic of diffusion processes. Anti-gay rights coverage starts its diffusion process later but then catches up. Second, in the year gay marriages are introduced, we observe a dramatic increase in coverage of both pro- and anti-gay rights language; the increase in the latter is larger. The rise in coverage is still present in the 3 years after the institutional change. Third, there is substantial spatial autocorrelation in media coverage (JEL J15, Z1).

See: https://academic.oup.com/jleo/article-abstract/39/2/456/6511916

Nearly 40 countries at UN back LGBTQ families

Nearly 40 countries at UN back LGBTQ families

Nearly 40 countries at UN back LGBTQ families
Argentina, Brazil, Britain, Canada, Germany, Mexico, Spain and the United States were among the signatories. (Photo: AFP/Henry Nicholls)

21 Jun 2023 04:40AM

GENEVA: Nearly 40 countries at the United Nations backed LGBTQ families on Tuesday (Jun 20), at a time when some Muslim and African nations are contesting sexual orientation and gender identity language in UN forums.

“Families play a fundamental role in society. Supporting families is an important element in promoting and protecting human rights,” 37 countries said in a statement at the UN Human Rights Council.

“This support must be inclusive of all family compositions, including multigenerational and extended families, single parent households, LGBTIQ+ families and Indigenous kinship groups,” Australia’s representative said on behalf of several countries. They were mainly from Europe and the Americas, plus Israel, New Zealand and East Timor.

They called on countries and UN bodies “to continue to apply an inclusive lens to families, and to ensure that equality, non-discrimination, and the universality of human rights remain at the centre of engagement in supporting families”.

Argentina, Brazil, Britain, Canada, Germany, Mexico, Spain and the United States were among the signatories.

The statement comes as several other countries, notably from the Middle East, are mounting a defence of the traditional family in UN forums.

Sexual orientation and gender identity issues will be at the heart of the 53rd Human Rights Council session, which started on Monday and runs until mid-July.

Such issues have become a contentious in several branches of the UN.

Countries in the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation and many African nations, plus Russia and China, are trying to roll back concepts and language which have been embedded in UN documents for at least a decade.

Earlier this month, OIC and African countries were blocking the adoption of the UN labour agency’s budget, before agreeing to a last-minute compromise over references to discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation.

“Promoting a framework around discrimination that does not have international consensus and reflects priorities of the few risks undermining the spirit of cooperation,” said Pakistan’s Khalil Hashmi, on behalf of the OIC group, before the vote was finally passed.

The World Health Organization has since last year seen attempts to remove such references from its strategy on infection prevention, while the Human Rights Council faces growing opposition to long-standing efforts to monitor for discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

Source: https://www.channelnewsasia.com/world/nearly-40-countries-un-back-lgbtq-families-3575741

Human Rights Council Holds Interactive Dialogue with the Independent Expert on Protection against Violence and Discrimination Based on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity

Human Rights Council Holds Interactive Dialogue with the Independent Expert on Protection against Violence and Discrimination Based on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity

The Council also held an interactive dialogue on the report of the Independent Expert on sexual orientation and gender identity, Victor Madrigal-Borloz. 

Presenting the report, Mr. Madrigal-Borloz said it was about the intersections between the right to freedom of religion or belief and the right to be free from violence and discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.  Religion was not inherently pro- or anti-lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender.  Yet, religion and the human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and gender-diverse persons were often placed in antagonistic positions in social and political discourse.  In some cases, religious narratives had been deliberately used to justify violence and discrimination, often in defiance of the doctrine of those faiths.  The resulting sense of conflict undermined the ideal of peaceful human coexistence.  The world needed to condemn the wrongful use of religious beliefs as an excuse for violence or discriminatory denial of the human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender persons. 

Mr. Madrigal-Borloz also reported that he had undertaken three country visits to the United States, Cambodia and the United Kingdom.  He planned to publish reports on these visits before the end of his tenure in October of this year. 

In the ensuing discussion, many speakers thanked the Independent Expert for his valuable work and reaffirmed the importance of the protection of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons from violence and discrimination, and for the progressive development of international human rights norms and standards.  Speakers expressed concern about the alarming rates of violence, discrimination, and stigmatisation against this group worldwide, including discrimination based on religion or belief.  Speakers said they condemned any invocation of freedom of religion or belief to justify violations against persons on the basis of their sexual orientation and gender identity, as well as any violence against these people under the pretext of a religious practice.  Some speakers were concerned that some States were invoking religious and traditional values to adopt laws that coerced and discriminated against lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex people, such as those criminalising consensual same-sex sexual relations with penalties, including death.  States that had not done so should decriminalise consensual same-sex conduct in line with their obligations under international human rights law.

Speaking in the dialogue were Brazil, European Union, Argentina on behalf of a group of countries, Netherlands, Portugal, Liechtenstein, United Nations Women, United Kingdom, Israel, Peru, Luxembourg, United Nations Children’s Fund, Viet Nam, Costa Rica, Belgium, Czech Republic, Slovenia, Ecuador, Iceland on behalf of group of countries, Germany, United States, France, Spain, Australia, Colombia, Canada, Malta, Venezuela, New Zealand, Ireland, South Africa, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, Austria, Greece, Switzerland, Chile, Albania, Georgia, Cuba, Italy, Montenegro, Bolivia, Cyprus, Nepal, Uruguay, Hungary and Thailand.

Also speaking were Federatie van Nederlandse Verenigingen tot Integratie Van Homoseksualiteit – COC Nederland, International Lesbian and Gay Association on behalf of Southeast Asia Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity and Expression Caucus Inc., GIN SSOGIE NPC on behalf of Southeast Asia Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity and Expression Caucus Inc., British Humanist Association, Humanists International, Swedish Federation of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Rights on behalf of Southeast Asia Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity and Expression Caucus, Inc., International Organization for the Right to Education and Freedom of Education, Swedish Association for Sexuality Education, International Service for Human Rights on behalf of Southeast Asia Sexual Orientation, and Right Livelihood Award Foundation.

The webcast of the Human Rights Council meetings can be found hereOpens in new window.  All meeting summaries can be found here.  Documents and reports related to the Human Rights Council’s fifty-third regular session can be found hereOpens in new window.

More: https://www.ungeneva.org/en/news-media/meeting-summary/2023/06/le-conseil-des-droits-de-lhomme-dialogue-avec-lexpert

Estonia Parliament passes bill allowing gender-neutral marriage

Estonia Parliament passes bill allowing gender-neutral marriage

Estonia’s Parliament, the Riigikogu, passed a bill Monday to allow gender-neutral marriage in the country. The bill was sent to President Alar Karis for approval on Tuesday. Estonia is the first Baltic nation and the first former Soviet Union nation to legalize gender-neutral or same-sex marriage.

The bill defines marriage as being between two people of legal age—regardless of sex or gender. The bill also allows a “cohabitation” option for couples, which will allow much of the same privileges of marriage, with an accessible process to transition from a state-sanctioned “cohabitation” to a marriage. The bill also protects the inheritance rights of children raised in a same-sex marriage, as well as the adoption rights of same-sex couples.

The Riigikogu celebrated the bill, calling it a “fully realized” version of previously passed laws such as the Cohabitation Act passed in 2014. Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas also lauded the milestone the bill represents in European history, saying, “We join other Nordic nations with this historic decision. I’m proud of my country. We’re building a society where everyone’s rights are respected and people can love freely.”

LGBTQIA+ people in Estonia celebrated the decision, with Annely Lepamaa, a lesbian living in Estonia, telling Reuters, “Until now, I needed to fight for everything. I had to go to court to adopt my own children, which is like, why? Now, I’m a human with rights.”

The Estonian Human Rights Centre conducted a poll in May, which found that over half of the country supported same-sex or gender-neutral marriage. The poll also found a significant increase in support for LGBTQIA+ people since 2012. Executive Director for the Human Rights Centre Egert Rünne stated, “Support of marriage equality among people aged 20-29 is 75%. This is a clear message to political parties: if they want to attract younger voters, they have to stand up for the human rights of all people in Estonia.”

Other Baltic countries have struggled to build political coalitions to support same-sex or gender-neutral marriage. Latvia currently allows “civil unions,” which confer some of the same rights as marriage onto same-sex couples. However, a bill that would extend the right to marriage has been stuck in the country’s Parliament for some time. This is despite Latvian President Edgars Rinkevics being the first openly LGBTQIA+ head of state in the EU. Lithuania has also struggled to affirm same-sex or gender-neutral marriage, currently only recognizing same-sex marriage from outside of the country. Lithuania also has a bill that would allow same-sex marriage stuck in Parliament for a lengthy period.

Assuming Karis approves the bill, it will become law in Estonia in 2024.

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US federal court strikes down Arkansas ban on gender-affirming care for transgender youth

US federal court strikes down Arkansas ban on gender-affirming care for transgender youth

A federal court in Arkansas struck down an Arkansas law on Tuesday that banned gender-affirming care for transgender youth, finding the ban was unconstitutional. The law, Act 626, banned gender-affirming care for transgender youth and punished doctors that referred patients to such care. The ruling is the first case about gender-affirming care to reach a final decision.

Opponents of the law celebrated the US District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas’s decision, with Deputy Director for Transgender Justice at the ACLU’s LGBTQ & HIV Project Chase Strangio saying:

This ruling offers an enormous relief to transgender youth and their families across Arkansas and across the country. In state after state, transgender people are being forced to fight for our most basic rights, including access to the health care many of us need to live. This victory shows that these laws, when tested by evidence, are indefensible under any standard of constitutional review.

In his decision, Judge James Moody, Jr. said that Act 626 violated the First Amendment of the US Constitution, as well as the Equal Protection and Due Process clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. Act 626 violated doctor’s First Amendment right to free speech by limiting their ability to refer patients to safe and necessary medical care in line with their professional judgment. It violated the Equal Protection clause on two fronts: by determining what medical care is available to people based on their sex at birth, and by discriminating against transgender people. The interests asserted by the state of Arkansas, like protecting youth or ensuring medical safety, did not pass the heightened scrutiny that applies in cases of sex and gender discrimination.

The Due Process clause protects certain liberty rights. Moody noted that parents’ rights to raise their children are one of the most recognized and protected liberty rights. In this case, he ruled that parents “have a fundamental right to seek medical care for their children and, in conjunction with their adolescent child’s consent and their doctor’s recommendation, make a judgment that medical care is necessary.” Act 626 violated the Due Process clause because it interfered with parents of transgender youth’s ability to seek medical care for their children.

Moody rejected many of Arkansas’s arguments about the need for caution when it comes to transgender medical care, saying that “there is no evidence that the Arkansas healthcare community is throwing caution to the wind when treating minors with gender dysphoria.”

Parents and transgender youth expressed relief, with Dylan Brandt, a 17-year-old transgender boy from Arkansas and the lead plaintiff, saying:

I’m so grateful the judge heard my experience of how this health care has changed my life for the better and saw the dangerous impact this law could have on my life and that of countless other transgender people. My mom and I wanted to fight this law not just to protect my health care, but also to ensure that transgender people like me can safely and fully live our truths.

The Arkansas legislature passed Act 626 in 2021. It was the first law in the country that targeted gender-affirming care for transgender youth. The then-Governor Asa Hutchinson vetoed the bill, expressing concerns about government interference in healthcare. In an op-ed after legislators overrode his veto, Hutchinson explained that the law “puts the state as the definitive oracle of medical care, overriding parents, patients and health-care experts.”

A number of states followed Arkansas’s lead in passing bills targeting gender-affirming care and transgender youth. The degree of legislation targeting transgender people and the LGBTQ+ community more broadly led a prominent LGBTQ+ rights group to declare a state of emergency.

Moody’s decision adds to LGBTQ+ advocates’ recent victories in court, including temporary injunctions against similar laws in Indiana and Florida. “This decision sends a clear message,” said Executive Director of the ACLU of Arkansas Holly Dickson. “Fear-mongering and misinformation about this health care do not hold up to scrutiny; it hurts trans youth and must end.”

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ECtHR: CASE OF BEUS v. CROATIA – No proper proceedings agains persons responible of hate crimes agains gay victims constitute violation of Articles 14 and 3 ECHR

ECtHR: CASE OF BEUS v. CROATIA – No proper proceedings agains persons responible of hate crimes agains gay victims constitute violation of Articles 14 and 3 ECHR

28.  The relevant principles concerning the adequacy of the State’s procedural response to violent homophobic attacks have been summarised in Sabalić (cited above, §§ 63-70 and 90-98).

29.  In the present case, following the verbal and physical attack on the applicant on 10 May 2014, the police, who had immediately responded at the scene, established that the applicant had been subjected to threats and had sustained physical injuries as a result of a violent attack by several men uttering homophobic insults (see paragraph 5 above). These initial findings sufficed as prima facie indications of violence motivated or at least influenced by the applicant’s sexual orientation (compare Sabalić, cited above, § 105, and the cases cited therein). According to the Court’s case-law, this required the effective application of domestic criminal-law mechanisms capable of elucidating the possible hate motive with homophobic overtones behind the violent incident and of identifying and, if appropriate, adequately punishing those responsible (ibid.).

30.  The police then filed a complaint against the two suspects with the State Attorney’s Office for threatening the applicant, and another complaint with the Minor Offences Court for disturbing public order and peace. The State Attorney decided not to prosecute the suspects because T.B. and F.Z. had had alibis and the latter had been recognised with only 90% certainty by the applicant. Despite the fact that M.M. had no alibi and had been recognised with 90% certainty by the applicant and 100% certainty by his friend, the State Attorney considered the identification parade to be unreliable evidence and dismissed the criminal complaint against M.M., without explaining why no criminal proceedings had ever been instituted against him.

31.  On the other hand, the Minor Offences Court found M.M. guilty on the basis of the same evidence. It sentenced him to community service and ordered him to make an apology, while at the same time acquitting F.Z.

32.  Although it is not for the Court to address issues of domestic law concerning individual responsibility, the Court observes that the minor‑offence proceedings did not in any manner address the hate crime element to the physical attack against the applicant, nor was M.M. indicted or convicted of any charges related to violence motivated by discrimination (compare Sabalić, cited above, § 108, and the cases cited therein).

33.  Moreover, the Court notes that in the minor-offence proceedings M.M. was ordered to perform community service and to make an apology, a sentence which, it appears, was not enforced until more than two years after his conviction. In the Court’s view, such a sentence, despite M.M. being a minor at the relevant time, was manifestly disproportionate to the gravity of the ill-treatment suffered by the applicant (compare Identoba and Others v. Georgia, no. 73235/12, § 75, 12 May 2015, and Stoyanova v. Bulgaria, no. 56070/18, § 68, 14 June 2022).

34.  The Court further notes that M.M.’s conviction and his very lenient punishment in minor-offence proceedings was the only concrete result of the authorities’ efforts to identify the perpetrators of a number of attacks on the applicant over a period of two years. As regards the remaining incidents, the police were never able to identify any of the perpetrators. Although the State’s investigative obligation is one of means and not of result, the Court cannot but note the numerous flaws in their investigations, as identified in the Ombudsperson’s report (see paragraph 22 above), including the failure to take fingerprints, interview neighbours and obtain the personal information of the witness who wished to remain anonymous. As a consequence, the police responses to the applicant’s numerous complaints could be regarded as responses fostering a sense of impunity for the acts of harassment and violent hate crime to which the applicant was subjected at the hands of private individuals, rather than as a procedural mechanism showing that such acts could in no way be tolerated (compare Sabalić, cited above, § 111, and the cases cited therein).

35.  The foregoing is sufficient for the Court to conclude that there has been a violation of Article 14 in conjunction with Article 3 of the Convention under its procedural aspect in the present case.