logo
Liberal senator Claire Chandler calls for Australia to follow US Olympic and Paralympic Committee in barring transgender athletes from competition

Liberal senator Claire Chandler calls for Australia to follow US Olympic and Paralympic Committee in barring transgender athletes from competition

Sky News AU23-07-2025
Liberal Senator Claire Chandler has called for the Australian Olympic Committee to follow the United States' lead and ban transgender athletes from competition.
The US Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC) quietly updated its eligibility rules on Monday, slipping into its 27-page Athlete Safety Policy a section saying it would 'collaborate with various stakeholders… to ensure that women have a fair and safe competition environment consistent with Executive Order 14201'.
Executive Order 14201 is more widely known as the Keeping Men Out of Women's Sports order, which US President Donald Trump signed in February.
In a letter to governing sporting bodies obtained by US media outlets, USOPC chief executive Sarah Hirshland and president Gene Sykes said the updated policy 'emphasises the importance of ensuring fair and safe competition environments for women.'
'All National Governing Bodies are required to update their applicable policies in alignment,' the letter warned.
The move follows last year's Olympics controversy surrounding gold medalist boxers Imane Khelif and Lin Yu-ting, who are not transgender but reportedly failed prior gender eligibility tests.
Italian sprinter Valentina Petrillo also became the first Paralympic transgender athlete to compete last year.
New Zealand weightlifter Laurel Hubbard was the first openly transgender athlete to compete at the Olympics in 2021.
Senator Chandler welcomed the move by USOPC, calling on the Australian committee to take similar steps.
'The Australian Olympic Committee should be doing what all sporting organisations around the world are doing and recognising that female athletes want to have their sporting categories protected,' Senator Chandler said.
'I'm very glad to see sporting organisations finally recognising the need to protect female-only sport, but frankly speaking, it's taken far too long to get to this point.
'We know that World Athletics, World Swimming, World Rugby, all these peak international sporting organisations over the last five years have realised that women's sport needs protecting. It is well past time that Australian sporting organisations start doing exactly the same thing.'
The Liberal called for her parliamentary colleagues to revive her failed Save Women's Sports bill, a private member's bill she introduced in 2022.
'My Save Women's Sports bill is just as relevant now as it was three or four years ago, when I first introduced it to the parliament, and it's ridiculous that women and girls in Australia don't have a legal right to their own sport,' Senator Chandler said.
'That bill is still there and if anyone - government, Coalition, crossbench - wants to pick that bill up and try and get it through the parliament, I think that would be a very useful conversation for us as a parliament to have.'
While some sporting bodies including swimming, athletics and cycling have banned transgender participating in international women's competitions, others have been more inclusive.
Women's Forum Australia head of advocacy Stephanie Bastiaan said it's 'common sense' for all sporting bodies to reform their policies based on women's sex-based rights.
'We know that women are being injured, we know that they're losing spots at the Olympics and in these categories due to the fact these sporting bodies are not protecting them on the basis of biological sex and I think that they need to put their foot down and make sure that it happens,' Ms Bastiaan said.
'This is a great outcome for girls in the US. The Trump administration is to be commended for its proactive approach in protecting women's sport.
'We need the Australian government to follow suit, bringing in legislative reforms that mandate sporting bodies protect the female category on the basis of biological sex, so that all girls - regardless of whether they're playing at a community, state or elite level - have the right to a safe, fair and equal playing field.'
Equality Australia CEO Anna Brown said Australian sporting bodies including the AOC had been navigating the issues around transgender inclusion in a 'sensible and practical way'.
'We hope they continue to prioritise inclusion and only restrict participation where there is a clear risk to safety or fairness,' Ms Brown said.
She said given the 'tiny number of trans athletes playing in any sport', a case-by-case approach remained feasible and the most effective way to protect individual rights over 'blunt and harmful blanket bans'.
'Sporting organisations across Australia have worked hard to include trans women and to ensure everyone is treated with dignity and can participate safely and fairly,' Ms Brown said.
'As recently as 2023, after extensive consultation and research, the Australian Institute of Sport found there was no case for a blanket ban on trans athletes in any sport, even at the elite level.
'Its guidelines encourage sporting bodies in Australia to start from a position of inclusion and state that any restrictions must be justified on a case-by-case basis, where strength, stamina and physique are relevant, and be no more restrictive than necessary to ensure meaningful competition for everyone.'
An AOC spokeswoman did not respond to a request for comment.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cricket greats Jimmy Anderson and David Warner questioned after Hundred debuts fall flat
Cricket greats Jimmy Anderson and David Warner questioned after Hundred debuts fall flat

7NEWS

time31 minutes ago

  • 7NEWS

Cricket greats Jimmy Anderson and David Warner questioned after Hundred debuts fall flat

He opened the bowling for the Manchester Originals on his Hundred debut — but at the grand old age of 43, James Anderson just couldn't turn back the clock to his glory days at Old Trafford. England's all-time leading Test wicket taker was hit for 38 off his wicketless 20-ball stint on Wednesday as the Originals went down to a dramatic one-wicket defeat to Southern Brave on the penultimate ball. Tymal Mills proved the star with bat and ball after his late partnership with Craig Overton saw the Brave home. At 43 years and seven days, Anderson became the second-oldest player ever to take part in the 100-ball-a-side competition, behind only South African Imran Tahir, who was 43 years 149 days when he played for Birmingham Phoenix back in 2022. The Originals batted first, with England white-ball stars Jos Buttler and Phil Salt dominating with a 48-run partnership which was only ended by Mills, who grabbed the key wicket of Buttler for 22 before he claimed another prize scalp of South African big hitter Heinrich Klaasen. Mills finished with 3-22 after ending Salt's entertaining knock of 60 from 41 deliveries, while Mark Chapman (22) and Lewis Gregory (6) finished unbeaten as the hosts made 4-131. Anderson bowled the first 10 balls of the innings for 10 runs but it was Sonny Baker who found a quick breakthrough to snare captain James Vince for six. Former England opener Jason Roy was particularly hard on Anderson's bowling, smashing him for four fours and a six off his final 10 balls. After all the hype ahead of the tournament, it was an embarrassing debut for the ageing great a fans wondered why he was even playing. 'James Anderson too old for the Hundred sadly!' a fan blasted on X (formerly Twitter). 'Nothing personal against James Anderson but is it right to play in the Hundred and take a place of deserving youngster?' another fan said. And another: 'Jimmy Anderson didn't bowl well ... I wouldn't play him in this format. County T20 he is OK.' And another: 'Jimmy Anderson in and it's game over.' Roy eventually sliced onto the stumps from a teasing Baker delivery for 30 while Scott Currie continued to keep the Originals in the hunt with his excellent 4-28, featuring the wickets of Leus du Plooy, Laurie Evans, Chris Jordan and Michael Bracewell. But a last-gasp effort from Mills and Craig Overton featured the pair smashing 25 from 11 deliveries. Mills eventually fell, slogging out to Currie off Gregory, but new batter Reece Topley coolly smashed a boundary to seal a tight win with one delivery remaining. David Warner's Hundred debut falls flat as Spirit are downed David Warner's debut in England's Hundred competition has fallen flat, the Australian opener dismissed for a ten-ball nine and his London Spirit side thrashed by their capital rivals Oval Invincibles at Lord's. It was his first appearance at the self-styled Home of Cricket since the Test match two years ago in which he was abused in the Long Room by members after Alex Carey controversially ran out Jonny Bairstow. The former Australia Test opener spiced up his bow by criticising England hero Joe Root's batting, suggesting he 'take the surfboard off his front leg', if he was to finally make an Ashes hundred Down Under. But there was no obvious antagonism from the crowd when he ran out to open through a cloud of firework smoke as Spirit batted first. Warner is one of the big names lured by higher paydays to add lustre to the competition, with Steve Smith and Marcus Stoinis also involved. The 38-year-old is picking up Stg 100,000 ($A205,000) and the other two Stg 120,000 ($A246,000). His high profile in England is clear from the event using his image in social media to promote the competition. However, Warner was unable to follow the example set by his compatriots Grace Harris and Meg Lanning, who made 89 not out and 85 respectively in the preceding women's match in the double-header. He saw little of the strike early on as Spirit struggled to adapt to a slow pitch that took spin, and hit one four before his dismissal, caught at long-on trying to whack Jordan Clark's slower ball. That left Spirit 3-26 from 31 balls and it didn't get any better, being dismissed for 80, the second lowest men's score in the competition's five years,. Invincibles, the defending champions, cruised to victory with six wickets and 31 balls to spare, hitting the night's only six to win it Ashton Turner was Spirit's top scorer with 21 but the Australian who did best was Invincibles' Jason Behrendorff who took 17-1 in his 20 balls, taking the wicket of Spirit captain Kane Williamson. Afghanistan legspinner Rashid Khan was the star turn, taking 3-11 in 20 balls while Sam Curran claimed 3-18. It wasn't just a London derby, there was also a West Australian coaching clash in which Tom Moody came out well on top against Justin Langer, though as the latter observed, he's barely had 48 hours to work with the team. The coaching test will be where they are at when these teams meet again at the end of the league on August 25. Langer clearly has a lot more work on his hands than Moody, who's aiming for a three-peat with Invincibles. - With Glenn Moore Australian men in The Hundred David Warner, Ashton Turner *Dan Worrell (London Spirit), Jason Behrendorff, *Nathan Sowter (Oval Invincibles), Hilton Cartwright (Southern Brave), Marcus Stoinis (Trent Rockets), Steve Smith, Riley Meredith, Chris Green (Welsh Fire).

Paris 'sting' driving Australian triathlete to stardom
Paris 'sting' driving Australian triathlete to stardom

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

Paris 'sting' driving Australian triathlete to stardom

Matt Hauser has taken what the Paris Olympics showed him and run with it - all the way to a triathlon world title and the top of the men's rankings. As the 27-year-old continues to fulfil his potential, he's giving Australian triathlon what it's lacked for several years - a genuine Olympic star. Hauser has made an outstanding start to the LA Games cycle, winning two of the first four rounds in this year's world championship series and finishing no lower than second. The two-time Olympian also anchored Australia at the mixed relay world titles last month, overcoming a 20-second deficit as Hauser and Paris teammates Sophie Linn and Luke Willian combined with Emma Jeffcoat to win the event for the first time since 2017. The individual and mixed relay events will be run again at the LA Games. No Australian has won the men's triathlon world title since Pete Robertson in 2005, with the series format introduced in 2009. Olympic medallist Emma Moffatt won the women's world championship series in 2009 and '10. The October 19 championship series final will be held in Wollongong, giving Hauser even more motivation for a big season. Hauser finished seventh at Paris, the best Australian result in the Olympic men's race for two decades. But for a stumble in the bike-run transition, he may well have finished closer to the podium. "The thing I learned about Paris the most is that I can really make a difference in the sport. I can be a part of the next move," Hauser told AAP. "The building block towards LA is making sure that I'm one of the key figures in men's triathlon." Hauser said Paris was solid, but not nearly what he wanted. "It definitely stung a little bit. I knew I was capable - on a perfect day, I definitely could have medalled," he said. "I will take that, and I will definitely take that forward to the next few years leading into LA. "This year is just a matter of bouncing straight back into it and not having little hiccups and setbacks, like the little fall in transition." Hauser said having this year's final in Australia was another big motivation to make the best possible start to the LA Olympic cycle. "It's been the driving force for my results over the last six months. Having that carrot dangling in front of me has allowed me to not let Paris get me down too much, to get straight back on the horse," he said. "It's going to be tough ... I'm ultimately going to have to win Wollongong to secure the world title. "Although I've had an amazing season so far, I really just want to keep pushing forward." Winning the mixed relay world title has been a major morale boost for the national program, which now features Moffatt as a key official. She finished third at the Beijing Olympics behind compatriot Emma Snowsill, who won the gold medal and also is lending her expertise to the national squad. "It was a massive deal ... it's nice to be back," Hauser said of the mixed relay win. "We're slowly starting to find our way back to our groove, back to the top. It's an exciting prospect, given Brisbane is only seven years away - and that's still well and truly within my sights." Hauser is back on the Gold Coast for a training block before returning to Europe for two more world championship series rounds, and then Wollongong. He and partner Georgia Humphries have a 10-month old Vizsla pup Maple - "a perfect combination of crazy and cuddly" - and Hauser's well-curated collection of vinyl records. "I'm loving Black Sabbath at the moment - RIP Ozzy Osbourne," Hauser said.

Bernard Tomic retires hurt after falling over on match point in ATP Challenger
Bernard Tomic retires hurt after falling over on match point in ATP Challenger

7NEWS

time2 hours ago

  • 7NEWS

Bernard Tomic retires hurt after falling over on match point in ATP Challenger

Crestfallen Australian tennis player Bernard Tomic has added another blooper to his reel of lowlights, falling over on match point in an ATP Challenger Tour clash. And that was no metaphor — he actually fell over. The former world No.17 had match point and a look at American world No.424 Stefan Dostanic's second serve when he lost his footing and tumbled onto the court as his racquet went flying. Tomic took some time to get up and recompose himself while a nearby supporter could be heard asking if he was OK. Dostanic went on to win the game, take the set to a tiebreaker, which he won, and then claim the match when Tomic retired hurt after losing the first two games of the third set. Tomic, who will be 33 in October, has fallen to 211 in the world. It's a far cry from his former Davis Cup teammate Jordan Thompson, who is enjoying the form of his life in the twilight of his career. Thompson, whose battling heroics proved the highlight of the Australian challenge at Wimbledon, is to return to action at the Cincinnati Open after a much-needed injury break. Thompson worked wonders with his beaten-up body to reach the last-16 at the grass-court grand slam, having negotiated two five-set classics and a four-setter even while suffering from a debilitating back injury. His extraordinary run ended with him, almost inevitably, breaking down and being forced to retire against Taylor Fritz. He's since grabbed a crucial month's rest and recuperation following a season in which he's been so plagued by a catalogue of injuries that he had even talked at Wimbledon of possibly quitting for the season. But the indefatigable 'Thommo' will be back in action in the Masters 1000 event at Cincinnati which begins on Friday, after his name featured among eight Australians in the main draws for the traditional star-studded warm-up event before the US Open. He will join Alex de Minaur and Alexei Popyrin, fresh from their encouraging runs to to the quarter-final at the Canadian Open, as well as Chris O'Connell and Adam Walton in the men's draw, while Daria Kasatkina, Maya Joint and Ajla Tomljanovic will feature in the women's. Thompson, whose ranking has dropped to No.44 in the world, will open up in Cincinnati against a qualifier and will be keen to avoid an early exit that could consign him to a place outside the top 50 for the first time since the start of his breakthrough 2024 season. De Minaur, who has a first-round bye, will meet the winner of the Hugo Dellien-Reilly Opelka first-round contest in the last-64 while Popyrin will face a qualifier in his second-round opener. No Australian man has won in Cincinnati since Pat Rafter 27 years ago, and it will be once again the tallest of orders with the game's two biggest names back in the fray. World No.1 Jannik Sinner and No.2 Carlos Alcaraz are seeded to meet each other in what could be another classic final after they shared triumphs at Wimbledon and Roland Garros respectively. Both men gave Toronto a miss, with top seed Sinner ready to defend his Cincinnati crown after beating Frances Tiafoe in the final last summer.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store