Federal Judge Halts Trump Administration Ban on Transgender Military Service
The ruling, effective March 21, criticizes the policy as discriminatory and lacking legal justification, reaffirming equality principles.
- A federal judge in Washington suspended a Trump administration decree banning transgender individuals from military service, citing equality principles outlined in the Declaration of Independence.
- The judge criticized the policy as 'hostile' and unjustified, stating it lacked legal or rational grounds for excluding transgender individuals from the armed forces.
- The decree, signed by Donald Trump in January 2025, aimed to stop recruiting transgender individuals and expel those already serving, except under special exemptions.
- This decision follows a history of policy reversals, including Joe Biden's 2021 reversal of Trump's first-term ban, which had allowed transgender individuals to serve openly in the military.
- Approximately 15,000 transgender individuals currently serve in the U.S. military, representing a small fraction of the total two million service members.