The topic of discussion for this Constitution Monday concerns “one of the most-anticipated decisions” of the 2024-25 Supreme Court term. The case is United States v. Skrmetti, “a Tennessee law prohibiting so-called gender-affirming medical interventions for minors.” The Supreme Court ruled that the law “does not violate the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause.” Thomas Jipping explained the court’s decision as follows.
Tennessee is among more than 20 states that prohibit such medical
interventions for minors. Its law, called SB1, allows doctors to prescribe
drugs such as puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones or to perform certain
surgeries only to treat specific medical conditions. These include congenital
defects, disease, or physical injury. It prohibits their use in cases of
“gender dysphoria, gender identity disorder, [and] gender incongruence.”
Three minors who wanted to identify with the opposite sex and their
parents challenged SB1, arguing that it violated the 14th Amendment’s
requirement that states provide the “equal protection of the laws.” …
The
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit, which includes Tennessee, didn’t buy
it and neither did the Supreme Court. Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the
6-3 opinion, refusing to find a “sex-based classification” in a statute that,
to state the obvious, does not classify based on sex. SB1 applies to all
minors, regardless of sex. The only distinctions it makes are age (it applies
to minors, not adults) and the medical use of the particular surgeries and
drugs. Neither of these has anything to do with sex.
Every
Supreme Court decision has two parts: the judgment, which is typically a yes/no
answer to a specific legal question, and the opinion, which explains the
reasons for the judgment. The judgment decides the case before the court and
the opinion can impact other cases. Here, Roberts’ opinion addressed some
important issues that will no doubt be raised in other cases.
He
emphasized, for example, that our understanding of gender is constantly
changing and that the advisability and efficacy of medical interventions in
cases of gender dysphoria or incongruence is being hotly debated. In fact,
Roberts pointed out, several European countries that jumped on the
“gender-affirming” care bandwagon have reversed course, “rais[ing] significant
concerns regarding the potential harms associated with using puberty
blockers and hormones to treat transgender minors.”
In
addition, the court refused to extend its controversial decision in Bostock v.
Clayton County from the statutory to the constitutional context….
Unless a law discriminates on the
basis of things such as race, religion, or sex, courts are not going to
second-guess legislative judgments about policy issues. This decision means
that gender-related
laws like SB1 are in the broad category of matters, such as regulating the
practice of medicine generally, that the people and their elected
representatives must handle. SB1, Roberts wrote, “clearly meets this standard.”
…
Challenges
to similar laws in other states raise the same equal protection clause issue
and whether parents have a right, under the due process clause of the
same 14th Amendment, to obtain medical interventions for their minor children.
This decision should settle the first issue, but the second will likely find
its way to the Supreme Court as litigation elsewhere continues.
In
recent polls, many Americans say that the Supreme Court decides cases
based more on politics than law. The court can fuel that perception when it
makes up rights that are not in the Constitution’s text or tries to reach a
result that is politically, but not judicially, correct. This is not one of
those cases. The court applied basic equal protection clause analysis and came
to the obvious, and objectively correct, conclusion. As Roberts concluded, the
equal protection clause does not resolve “fierce scientific and policy debates”
like those today that relate to gender. That’s our job as citizens.
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