The state of Minnesota sent a letter to the Trump administration on Friday, saying it would not offer a “substantive response” to a demand to ban transgender players from girls’ sports, citing a lack of clarity amid the government shutdown.
Minnesota Solicitor General Liz Kramer wrote that the timeline for state action was unclear and criticized the federal Title IX investigation and the suggestion that the state “faces imminent cuts to federal funding” unless it makes changes.
“As you know,” Kramer wrote, “if the federal government intends to follow the law, it would need to follow an extensive, multi-step administrative process before any federal funding to Minnesota education programs or activities could ever be terminated.”
The Trump administration issued a news release Sept. 30 saying Minnesota was in violation of Title IX because of the Minnesota State High School League policy that allows transgender athletes to participate in girls’ high school sports — and ordered the state to make changes in 10 days. That deadline passed Friday with no apparent clarity about repercussions.
Asked about the issue Friday, White House assistant press secretary Liz Houston issued a statement saying: “While Minnesota officials continue to intentionally endanger female athletes with their radical embrace of gender ideology, President Trump is committed to restoring commonsense policies and keeping men out of women’s sports.”
The statement also mentioned a need to address “the concerns of local school board members.”
School board members from across the state have organized for and against changes to the high school league policy since the administration’s mandate fanned a debate that had been underway for months.
On Friday, more than two dozen Minnesota school board members and candidates released a letter backing transgender athletes, calling for state and school leaders to affirm those students’ “right to fully participate in school sports.”