
Judge blocks Trump order threatening funding for institutions that provide gender-affirming care for youths
A federal judge on Tuesday issued a preliminary injunction blocking enforcement of the Trump administration's executive order threatening federal funding for institutions that provide gender-affirming care for anyone under 19.
U.S. District Judge Brendan Hurson of Maryland ordered the defendants to file a status report with the court by March 11, detailing their compliance with the court's order.
The lawsuit was filed by the American Civil Liberties Union, Lambda Legal and other groups in February on behalf of multiple families and youths who are members of PFLAG National, a nonprofit supporting the friends and families of LGBTQ people. They alleged that their care was disrupted by President Donald Trump's order.
The executive order blocked hospitals and clinics that receive federal funding from providing gender-affirming care to those under the age of 19.
The judge previously paused the administration's order in February, prompting many providers who had suspended care to resume under the court's temporary restraining order.
Hurson wrote in Tuesday's order that the plaintiffs had demonstrated that the hardships they were suffering were the result of the discontinuation of what medical professionals had deemed to be "essential care." The hardships, Hurson added, were "potentially catastrophic."
"Specifically," Hurson wrote, "the sudden denial or interruption of Plaintiffs' medical care has caused or is expected to soon cause unwanted physical changes, depression, increased anxiety, heightened gender dysphoria, severe distress, risk of suicide, uncertainty about how to obtain medical care, impediments to maintaining a social life, and fear of discrimination, including hate crimes."
In court filings, the Trump administration opposed the plaintiffs' request for relief, saying their 'arguments concern hypothetical downstream action that may or may not result from' the executive order.
The administration added that the 'plaintiffs here may be incidentally harmed depending on how those institutions react.'
Hurson's preliminary injunction will remain in place until the court decides on the merits of the case.
Joshua Block, senior staff attorney for the ACLU's LGBTQ & HIV Project, applauded the judge's decision and criticized Trump's executive order.
'This order from President Trump is a direct effort to threaten the well-being of transgender people while denying them equal protection under the law, enacted by coercing doctors to follow Trump's own ideology rather than their best medical judgment," Block said in a statement.

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an hour ago
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Powys County Times
an hour ago
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Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
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