The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday granted the Trump administration’s request to immediately enforce its ban on transgender military service, allowing the Pentagon to begin discharging service members with a diagnosis or history of gender dysphoria and to deny enlistment to transgender Americans. The decision, issued without a signed opinion, marks a major legal victory for President Trump and a significant rollback of LGBTQ+ rights in the military.
Several lower courts had ruled in favor of transgender plaintiffs. The Supreme Court’s three liberal justices publicly dissented.
The policy reinstates and expands upon Trump’s earlier transgender military ban from his first term, which had been reversed under President Joe Biden. Under the new guidance, service members who exhibit symptoms consistent with gender dysphoria will be “processed for separation,” according to a Pentagon memo. While the exact number of those affected is unclear, a 2023 estimate from a senior defense official identified more than 4,200 transgender service members with a formal diagnosis.
This story is developing.