Current:Home > FinanceJudge says Kansas shouldn’t keep changing trans people’s birth certificates due to new state law -Blueprint Capital School
Judge says Kansas shouldn’t keep changing trans people’s birth certificates due to new state law
View
Date:2025-04-13 15:38:05
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A federal judge ruled Thursday that Kansas officials shouldn’t keep changing transgender people’s birth certificates so the documents reflect their gender identities.
U.S. District Judge Daniel Crabtree approved Republican state Attorney General Kris Kobach’s request to block the changes because of a new state law rolling back trans rights. Kansas joins Montana, Oklahoma and Tennessee in barring such birth certificate changes.
Kansas is for now also among a few states that don’t let trans people change their driver’s licenses to reflect their gender identities. That’s because of a separate state-court lawsuit Kobach filed last month. Both efforts are responses to the new state law, which took effect July 1.
In federal court, Kobach succeeded in lifting a policy imposed when Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s administration settled a 2018 lawsuit from four transgender people challenging a previous Republican no-changes policy. The settlement came only months after Kelly took office in 2019 and required the state to start changing trans people’s birth certificates. More than 900 people have done so since.
Transgender Kansas residents and Kelly argued refusing to change birth certificates would violate rights protected by the U.S. Constitution, something Crabtree said in his brief order approving the settlement four years ago. Kobach argued that the settlement represented only the views of the parties and the new state law represents a big enough change to nullify the settlement’s requirements.
The new Kansas law defines male and female as the sex assigned at birth, based on a person’s “biological reproductive system,” applying those definitions to any other state law or regulation. The Republican-controlled Legislature enacted it over Kelly’s veto, but she announced shortly before it took effect that birth certificate changes would continue, citing opinions from attorneys in her administration that they could.
In the state-court lawsuit over driver’s licenses, a district judge has blocked ID changes until at least Nov. 1.
The new Kansas law was part of a wave of measures rolling back trans rights emerging from Republican-controlled statehouses across the U.S. this year.
The law also declares the state’s interests in protecting people’s privacy, health and safety justifies separate facilities, such as bathrooms and locker rooms, for men and women. Supporters promised that would keep transgender women and girls from using women’s and girls’ facilities — making the law among the nation’s most sweeping bathroom policies — but there is no formal enforcement mechanism.
As for birth certificates, Kobach argued in a recent filing in the federal lawsuit that keeping the full 2019 settlement in place is “explicitly anti-democratic” because it conflicts directly with the new law.
“To hold otherwise would be to render state governments vassals of the federal courts, forever beholden to unchangeable consent agreements entered into by long-gone public officials,” Kobach said.
In 2018, Kelly defeated Kobach, then the Kansas secretary of state, to win her first term as governor. Kobach staged a political comeback by winning the attorney general’s race last year, when Kelly won her second term. Both prevailed by narrow margins.
The transgender Kansas residents who sued the state in 2018 argued that siding with Kobach would allow the state to return to a policy that violated people’s constitutional rights.
In one scathing passage in a recent court filing, their attorneys asked whether Kobach would argue states could ignore the U.S. Supreme Court’s historic Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka ruling in 1954 outlawing racially segregated schools if their lawmakers simply passed a new law ordering segregation.
“The answer is clearly no,” they wrote.
___
Follow John Hanna on the X platform: https://twitter.com/apjdhanna
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Georgia election workers settle defamation lawsuit against conservative website
- Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Double Date With Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds in Style
- NFL Week 6 bold predictions: Which players, teams will turn heads?
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Video shows Coast Guard rescue boat captain hanging on to cooler after Hurricane Milton
- Man wins $3.1 million on $2 Colorado Lottery game
- Nation's first AIDS walk marches toward 40: What we've learned and what we've forgotten
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Opinion: SEC, Big Ten become mob bosses while holding College Football Playoff hostage
Ranking
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Pilot’s wife safely lands plane in California during medical emergency
- Ultimate Guide to Cute and Affordable Athleisure: 14 Finds Under $60
- Children and adults transported to a Pennsylvania hospital after ingesting ‘toxic mushrooms’
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- 11 Family Members Tragically Killed by Hurricane Helene in North Carolina
- The 2025 Ford Mustang GTD packs more HP than expected — at $325K
- Boeing will lay off 10% of its employees as a strike by factory workers cripples airplane production
Recommendation
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Woman who stabbed classmate to please Slender Man files third release request
Pat Woepse, husband of US women’s water polo star Maddie Musselman, dies from rare cancer
Nation's first AIDS walk marches toward 40: What we've learned and what we've forgotten
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
Tap to pay, Zelle and Venmo may not be as secure as you think, Consumer Reports warns
As 49ers' elevating force, George Kittle feels 'urgency' to capitalize on Super Bowl window
Nation's first AIDS walk marches toward 40: What we've learned and what we've forgotten