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Trump Puts California State Track Meet in the Transgender Spotlight

Trump Puts California State Track Meet in the Transgender Spotlight

A pair of transgender girls were prepared to compete in the track meet of their lives two years ago.
Both had qualified for the California high school track and field championships, arguably the most competitive state meet in the country.
But along came the hecklers and harassers, protesting their running in the girls' category even though a 2013 state law made that possible. Online, the comments against the trans girls grew unrelenting, and ominous. For their safety, they withdrew from the event.
On Friday, another transgender girl is set to test her skills against other girls at the state meet, which will be held over two days in Clovis, near Fresno. And the debate about the inclusion is more intense and vitriolic than ever.
'This is not fair, and totally demeaning to women and girls,' President Trump said about the event on social media this week. He threatened to withhold federal funding from California if the state did not bar the trans girl from competition.
'The president calling out this issue and jumping in on the harassment and threats about a single competitor in California high school sports is absurd, as a starting point,' Amanda Goad, director of the Gender, Sexuality & Reproductive Justice Project at the A.C.L.U. of Southern California, said on Wednesday.
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