logo
Texas attorney general sues adult swimming group for allowing transgender competitors

Texas attorney general sues adult swimming group for allowing transgender competitors

Fox Sports19-07-2025
Associated Press
The Texas attorney general has sued an adult swimming program after two transgender women were allowed to compete at a meet this spring in San Antonio, with one placing first in several events.
The suit alleged that U.S. Masters Swimming undermined the trust of consumers through 'false, deceptive, and misleading practices" because it said the other swimmers faced what it described as an unfair disadvantage in the Spring Nationals competition in April.
U.S. Masters Swimming said in a statement that it has been cooperating fully with Attorney General Ken Paxton's investigation, which comes as a nationwide battle over the participation of transgender athletes has played out at both the state and federal levels.
'It is deeply disappointing to see our organization and individual members publicly targeted in a lawsuit that appears to be more about generating headlines than seeking justice,' the statement said.
Republicans have leveraged the issue as a fight for athletic fairness for women and girls.
Paxton said in a news release Thursday that U.S. Masters Swimming "has deprived female participants of the opportunity to succeed at the highest levels by letting men win countless events.'
The suit said Ana Caldas placed first in the five events in the 45-49 age group, and Jennifer Rines finished ahead of dozens of women.
Rines wrote in a guest editorial in Swimming World in May that creating a separate category for transgender athletes might be the equitable solution for national-level events. But she said coming out as transgender carries the risk of losing jobs and friends.
'At what point does the level of competition justify forcing someone to out themselves or barring them from participation altogether?' she asked.
Even before the suit was filed, U.S. Masters Swimming revised its policy to bar transgender women from receiving recognition for placing in women's events, but still allowing them to compete.
But the suit said, 'This is all too little, too late.'
___
AP sports: https://apnews.com/hub/sports in this topic
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump says he's shortening the 50-day deadline for Russia to end the war in Ukraine
Trump says he's shortening the 50-day deadline for Russia to end the war in Ukraine

Boston Globe

time21 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Trump says he's shortening the 50-day deadline for Russia to end the war in Ukraine

Trump said he would now give Putin 10 to 12 days from Monday, meaning he wants peace efforts to make progress by Aug. 7-9. The plan includes possible sanctions and secondary tariffs targeting Russia's trading partners. The formal announcement would come later Monday or on Tuesday, he said. 'No reason in waiting,' Trump said of the shorter timeline. 'We just don't see any progress being made.' Advertisement Putin has 'got to make a deal. Too many people are dying,' Trump said during a visit to Scotland. There was no immediate response from Russia. Trump repeated his criticism of Putin for talking about ending the war but continuing to bombard Ukrainian civilians. 'And I say, that's not the way to do it,' Trump said. He added, 'I'm disappointed in President Putin.' Asked at a news conference about a potential meeting with the Russian leader, Trump said: 'I'm not so interested in talking anymore.' Still, he voiced some reluctance about imposing penalties on the Kremlin, saying that he loves the Russian people. 'I don't want to do that to Russia,' he said, but he noted how many Russians, along with Ukrainians, are dying in the war. Advertisement Ukraine has urged Western countries to take a tougher line with Putin. Andrii Yermak, the head of Ukraine's presidential office, thanked Trump for shortening the deadline. 'Putin understands only strength — and that has been conveyed clearly and loudly,' Yermak said on Telegram, adding that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy shared the sentiment. Latest attacks in Ukraine A Russian drone blew out the windows of a 25-story residential building in the Darnytskyi district of Kyiv, the head of the city's military administration, Tymur Tkachenko, wrote on Telegram. Eight people were injured, including a 4-year-old girl, he said. The attack also started a fire in Kropyvnytskyi, in central Ukraine, local officials said, but no injuries were reported. The main target of the Russian attack was Starokostiantyniv, in the Khmelnytskyi region of western Ukraine, the air force said. Regional authorities reported no damage or casualties. Western Ukraine is on the other side of the country from the front line, and the Ukrainian military is believed to have significant airfields as well as arsenals and depots there. In this photo provided by the Ukrainian Emergency Service, firefighters put out the fire in a fire department school following a Russian air attack in Kropyvnytskyi, Ukraine, Monday, July 28, 2025. Uncredited/Associated Press The Russian Defense Ministry said its forces carried out an overnight strike with long-range, air-launched weapons, hitting a Ukrainian air base along with an ammunition depot containing stockpiles of missiles and components for drone production. Associated Press journalist Illia Novikov in Kyiv, Ukraine, contributed.

USDA's reorg rollout
USDA's reorg rollout

Politico

time44 minutes ago

  • Politico

USDA's reorg rollout

Presented by With help from Jordan Wolman QUICK FIX — 'What are we trying to accomplish?': USDA chief Brooke Rollins is rolling out her department's reorganization plan — but not without some concern. — President Donald Trump secured a major trade deal with the European Union, narrowly avoiding a trade war that would hit U.S. farmers hard. — Republicans' plans to cut SNAP spending inspired one food policy wonk to run for Congress. IT'S MONDAY, JULY 28. Welcome to Morning Agriculture. I'm your host Grace Yarrow. Do you have any lunch plans? Send tips and thoughts on USDA's reorg to gyarrow@ and follow us at @Morning_Ag for more. Want to receive this newsletter every weekday? Subscribe to POLITICO Pro. You'll also receive daily policy news and other intelligence you need to act on the day's biggest stories. Driving the day WHAT'S NEXT FOR USDA REORG: The Senate Agriculture Committee will hear from USDA's No. 2 official Wednesday about the department's reorganization plan, which includes shifting much of its Washington-area staff to five hubs around the country. The hearing — featuring Deputy Agriculture Secretary Stephen Vaden — comes after the panel's top two lawmakers expressed disappointment that Congress wasn't consulted before the announcement. As you'll recall: On Thursday, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins unveiled her plan to significantly shrink the size of the department's D.C.-based employees and close several USDA buildings in the capital region. Committee Chair John Boozman (R-Ark.) and ranking member Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) both called for a hearing shortly after the plan was made public to better understand the details of Rollins' decision. 'I'm more concerned about just the efficiency,' Boozman said in a brief interview with MA last week. 'What are we trying to accomplish?' More details: Rollins said Friday that her 'best guess' is that 50 to 70 percent of USDA workers based in the Washington area will relocate to the five new hubs. Rollins, speaking on Fox News' 'America's Newsroom,' said USDA may fill vacant positions with people based in the areas of Salt Lake City; Fort Collins, Colorado; Indianapolis; Kansas City, Missouri; and Raleigh, North Carolina. 'Our best guess is that perhaps 50 to 70 percent of our Washington, D.C., staff will want to move — they will actually take that relocation,' she said. Pack your bags: Rollins suggested that the USDA workers based in the capital region who don't relocate should seek jobs in the private sector. 'The economy is beginning to thrive again,' she said. 'The golden age is here. President Trump's vision was always to move people out of these government jobs, where maybe it isn't the most productive use, into the private sector.' Rollins said in a video announcement to staff that employees will be notified of where they'll be expected to move in the 'coming months.' Some Republican senators — and Democratic Colorado Gov. Jared Polis — have also noted that current residents of the five USDA hub cities would be willing to take the new job opportunities. 'Especially with the loss of federal jobs in other areas, we welcome the new Department of Agriculture jobs being moved to Colorado,' Polis said. But Rob Larew, president of the National Farmers Union, warned that the reorganization would result in 'significant staff turnover' and loss of institutional knowledge of career staff — especially given that around 15,000 department employees have already left or taken buyouts this year. You'll recall: Rollins' long-awaited reorganization plan, which was first reported by POLITICO, calls for moving more than half of USDA's 4,600 Washington-area staff 'closer to' farmers, ranchers and foresters. More than 90 percent of USDA's nearly 100,000 employees already work outside the Beltway. Some related reading: The Trump administration this spring sought the ability to conduct mass layoffs at more than a dozen agencies, according to a new court filing that reveals what parts of the federal government were in the crosshairs of the White House's cost-cutting efforts — and which could be again now that the Supreme Court has cleared a legal block to staff reductions across the federal government. According to a Thursday court declaration filed in the Northern District of California, the administration sought the go-ahead to lay people off at 17 agencies and departments, including at USDA. Read the full story from our Sam Ogozalek here. MAHA MOMENT OUT NOW: FDA Commissioner Marty Makary defended the Trump administration's efforts to crack down on artificial food dyes, despite criticism from some Make America Healthy Again advocates that doing so doesn't address the root cause of chronic health issues. 'We want to create a different standard, and we want to have eyes on these new chemicals,' Makary said in an interview with POLITICO's Dasha Burns for 'The Conversation.' 'I think you win more bees with honey than fire.' Don't miss the full episode with Makary here. TRADE CORNER A BIG DEAL: President Donald Trump announced a preliminary trade agreement with the European Union Sunday, skirting a trade war that threatened to hurt farmers and opening new market opportunities for U.S. agriculture. The agreement locks in U.S. tariffs of 15 percent on most imports from the EU, fending off Trump's threat to raise tariffs on most EU goods to 30 percent on Aug. 1. Details are still to come for major food and ag industries, including the alcohol industry which relies heavily on trade to meet U.S. consumer demand. Trump promised in remarks Sunday that agriculture is among the top two winning industries of the deal. 'I think maybe cars would be the one that would go the biggest. And the second would be agriculture, the farmers,' he said. Relief for farmers? The EU's 27 nations drew up a list of U.S. goods — including soybeans and Kentucky bourbon — that would face retaliatory tariffs of up to 30 percent. Those were due to enter force from Aug. 7 onward, absent a deal between the two leaders. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen stressed the significance of the $1.7 trillion transatlantic trade relationship — the world's largest — and appealed to Trump to do the biggest deal that either of them have ever done, as our colleagues write. 'We have a trade deal between the two largest economies in the world, and it's a big deal. It's a huge deal,' she said. Worth watching: Trump also said that steel and aluminum from the EU would continue to be subject to 50 percent tariffs — which could impact input prices for farmers who rely on steel-based equipment or manufacturers that use the materials to package their goods. 2026 Watch CAMPAIGNING ON SNAP CUTS: A food aid policy wonk is running for Congress in response to Republicans' recent cuts to the nation's largest anti-hunger program. Salaam Bhatti has entered a crowded Democratic primary to eventually challenge GOP Rep. Rob Wittman in Virginia's 1st District, a seat that national Democrats have deemed a priority for flipping. He's arguing that the megalaw, which President Donald Trump signed earlier this month, will 'upend' lives as it forces millions of families off the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. And he thinks he's the best messenger on how to move forward in the face of those cuts. How he got here: Bhatti's experience growing up in a low-income family and relying on school meals to get by inspired him to work in the food aid space. While at the Virginia Poverty Law Center, he helped lead a bipartisan push to expand SNAP access to more than 25,000 Virginia households. Bhatti most recently served as SNAP director at the Food Research & Action Center, an anti-hunger nonprofit, where he tried to warn lawmakers against slashing the program in Trump's 'big, beautiful bill.' He faces an uphill battle — given his lack of name recognition and donor base — in order to beat his primary opponents, let alone Wittman, who won his race last year by about 13 percentage points. 'The bill pushed me over the edge,' Bhatti told our Jordan Wolman in an interview. 'I've always wanted to run for office. I never wanted to force it, but the way that the working class has been neglected in Congress required a working class champion to come in and fight.' This interview has been edited for length and clarity. While working at the Virginia Poverty Law Center, how did you get state Republicans to support expanding SNAP eligibility? Anti-hunger advocates, when it comes to working with Republicans, don't really have the power. So we brought in banks, health insurance companies, county organizations, city organizations, people who can talk about the budget, and the grocery stores as well. And so we were all able to say, 'Hey, listen, we all agree hunger is bad. It impacts all of us in some different way. So let's let them know that SNAP expansion is helping working families, and it's going to bring this much money into your district, into the stores, and that's going to have a great ripple effect.' When the elected officials heard all that ... that really helped propel them to vote for the bill. Your experience with SNAP in particular is significant. What about the bill's changes to SNAP do you feel is so devastating? The bill has the potential to end SNAP. There is a provision in there that shifts the cost of the benefit to the states. When it comes to figuring out where that money is going to come from, there's only three options. One is to increase taxes. Two is to shift money from other programs. No other agency is going to give up their already underfunded money. And third is to bring the SNAP expansion down to default levels and reduce how many people are receiving [benefits]. And if even that's not enough, then complete withdrawal from the program. And you think that's a possibility in Virginia. It's absolutely a possibility in Virginia. And other states, too. Read the full Q&A exclusively for Pro subscribers here. Transitions The Pet Food Institute has promoted Atalie Ebersole to vice president of government relations and Dana Waters to director of international affairs. Row Crops — Capping off all the other horrors in wartime Gaza is the food-distribution situation that has prevailed since late May. More than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed while seeking aid in Gaza since late May, according to the United Nations. (The Atlantic) — After ICE raided a Nebraska meatpacking plant, the company's leaders are wondering how to stay afloat with only half their workforce. (The New York Times) — Your açaí bowl or smoothie is about to get extra pricey, unless the Trump administration and Brazilian government reach a deal to avoid a 50 percent tariff on imports from Brazil that kicks in Aug. 1. (Reuters) — The Commerce Department on Friday announced its final decision raising anti-dumping duties on most Canadian lumber imports to 20.56 percent, to offset unfairly low prices and Canadian government subsidies, our Ari Hawkins writes. THAT'S ALL FOR MA! Drop us a line and send us your agriculture job announcements or events: gyarrow@ marciabrown@ jwolman@ sbenson@ rdugyala@ and gmott@

The red state wildcards
The red state wildcards

Politico

time44 minutes ago

  • Politico

The red state wildcards

TOP LINE Following the unexpected surge of Dan Osborn in Nebraska last fall, two new independent Senate candidates are following in his footsteps and seeking his advice as they hope to recreate his momentum. Idaho's Todd Achilles and South Dakota's Brian Bengs — both former Democrats — are running in their deep-red states as independents in 2026, joining Osborn as he makes another run in Nebraska. The three candidates, who are all veterans, have a group chat, too, where they bounce ideas off one another and share their stories from the trail. 'We're very different … but we're all doing this for the same reason,' Achilles told Score. Bengs, who ran for the Senate seat as a Democrat in 2022 (though he was registered as an independent before and after the campaign), said he probably wouldn't have gotten back into politics without Osborn's nudge. 'He broke the door down for this as a possibility,' Bengs said. Despite the trio's uphill battles to victory next year, Republicans have taken notice of the trend and are working to avoid a repeat of the 2024 Nebraska race. The National Republican Senatorial Committee is hounding GOP senators for lackluster fundraising, even in deep-red states, pointing to a motivated Democratic base that's ready to pour cash into races against Republicans. Republicans are working to quickly paint all of the independents as Democratic candidates. One way they've done that is by pointing to the use of ActBlue, the fundraising platform used by Democrats. Bengs and Achilles are not using ActBlue, and Bengs said that's a conscious decision to avoid being associated with a party he doesn't belong to. Even though Osborn's showing in 2024 was encouraging, it was also a double-edged sword. 'We are certainly on the radar as independents,' Bengs said. 'I think we are going to be taken more seriously by the other side, assuming that we can raise the funds.' Though Osborn's independence is an influence, Bengs and Achilles are both centering their campaigns on their own messages, they said. Achilles, who runs a veteran's advocacy organization, is focused on 'recommitting ourselves to the Constitution,' according to his campaign website. Bengs, meanwhile, said recent cuts to government funding while he was serving as a Park Ranger inspired him to jump back into politics. On his campaign website, Bengs highlights Mahatma Gandhi's seven dangers to human virtue, and said those messages will play an important role in his campaign. Longshot or not, they are pushing full steam ahead. 'We're in it to win it,' Achilles said, acknowledging that an independent run 'is not the easiest path to take,' but 'your duty is to do the hard right over the easy wrong.' In the unlikely scenario that all three are elected next fall, Bengs said it would change the way government functions. 'If you have a handful of independents that actually want some structural reform, that deprive either party of a majority, you can actually accomplish some significant business there and function as a kingmaker,' Bengs said. 'That makes a huge difference going forward for the future of the Republic.' Happy Monday, and thanks for starting your week with Score. Reach me: ahoward@ or @andrewjfhoward. Days until the AZ-07 general: 57 Days until the TN-07 primary: 71 Days until the 2025 election: 99 Days until the midterms: 465 Want to receive this newsletter every weekday? Subscribe to POLITICO Pro. You'll also receive daily policy news and other intelligence you need to act on the day's biggest stories. CAMPAIGN INTEL FIRST IN SCORE — DNC REDISTRICTING RESPONSE: The Democratic National Committee is announcing that it will deploy 30,000 volunteers in an effort to reach 'persuadable Republican Texas voters' and talk to them about the ongoing redistricting effort, according to a copy of the plan shared first with Score. 'The DNC is all hands on deck to hold Donald Trump and Greg Abbott accountable for their scheme to use the tragic Texas floods as cover to redraw the Texas maps in a last-ditch effort to save the Republican majority,' chair Ken Martin said in a statement. … The DNC isn't alone in targeting Texas voters on the GOP's redistricting plan. The left-leaning group Unrig Our Economy is putting $2 million into ads across four GOP-held Texas congressional districts that could get more competitive in a new map. The ads are focused on Medicaid cuts, but a senior adviser at the group told Score the districts were chosen specifically because of redistricting. … Democratic leaders are feeling pressure to join a brewing redistricting battle that is threatening to upend the midterms landscape — an effort that is likely to slam into legal and political reality, my colleagues Liz Crampton, Jeremy B. White and Nick Reisman reported over the weekend. OFF TO THE RACES — GOP Rep. Ralph Norman of South Carolina is running for governor in 2026, AP's Meg Kinnard scooped. PRIMARY WATCH — 'David Hogg wants to change the Democratic Party. He's off to a slow start,' by the Washington Post's Dan Merica and Clara Ence Morse. Merica and Morse report that Hogg's PAC backed out of its commitment to Irene Shin in Virginia, and 'just 18 percent of the nearly $2.5 million the group has spent since the April pledge has been on supporting candidates.' SUNDAY RECAP — 'Massie, Khanna hammer Republican leadership for thwarting Epstein transparency push,' by POLITICO's Gregory Svirnovskiy. PENNSYLVANIA GOV — ''A nightmare that no one wants': GOP fears Mastriano's down-ballot drag in Pennsylvania,' my colleague Holly Otterbein reports. MUSK'S THIRD PARTY — Elon Musk's unfulfilled plans to form an 'America Party' could threaten Republicans already fighting to defend their seats by razor-thin margins in next year's midterms elections, Democrats argued, by siphoning off more disgruntled conservatives from Republicans than disaffected liberals from the Democrats, POLITICO's Jacob Wendler reports. POLLING CORNER — President Donald Trump's approval rating remains underwater. But Democrats are faring worse, according to a new poll from The Wall Street Journal released Saturday, my colleague Ben Johansen notes. STAFFING UP — Michael Muller is joining TargetSmart as their new Senior Strategist, where he will focus on 'guiding TargetSmart's political and advocacy clients.' CODA — QUOTE OF THE DAY: 'I thought it was 'throwing ass,'' former Speaker Nancy Pelosi said about the venue Kick Axe Throwing DC, where she spoke to young voters at the Voters of Tomorrow Summit on Friday.

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