Families and Doctors Ask Federal Court to Enforce Injunction Blocking Trump Administration’s Anti-Trans Healthcare Policy
BALTIMORE – Attorneys representing families and doctors from across the country in federal court today asking the court to enforce its nationwide preliminary injunction blocking the Trump administration from taking steps to restrict funding for providers of gender-affirming medical care to people under 19.
A week after returning to office, President Trump issued an executive order threatening to withhold all federal funding from any medical provider who offers gender-affirming medical care to transgender people under 19. The order was soon after challenged by families, medical providers, and organizations that serve them in PFLAG v. Trump, a case filed on their behalf by the Ƶ, the Ƶ of Maryland, and Lambda Legal.
- On Tuesday March 4, a federal district court in Baltimore granted a nationwide preliminary injunction in PFLAG v. Trump preventing the Trump administration from conditioning, withholding, or terminating federal funding based on the fact that a healthcare entity or health professional provides gender-affirming medical care to a patient under 19 under the executive orders or from “tak[ing] any steps to implement, give effect to, or reinstate [the EOs] under a different name.”
- On March 5, the Center for Medicaid and Medicare Services (CMS) to providers stating that it “may begin taking steps to align its policies and regulations” with the Trump administration’s order.
- On March 6, the federal Health Services and Resources Administration (HRSA) and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) issued to grantees which specifically stated those steps could include terminating or “rescoping” grants.
Today’s motion asks the court to order the agencies to rescind the notices, provide the recipients of the notices with copies of the court order, and submit to the court signed acknowledgments by the agency heads that they have personally received a copy of the order.
The following is a joint statement from the Ƶ and Lambda Legal:
“These notices are a transparent attempt to coerce medical providers to ignore their best medical judgment and instead follow politically-charged edicts from the President, injecting his ideology into the medical lives of thousands of transgender people and their families. The Trump administration is not above the law. Like anyone else, it must abide by and respect federal court orders. We are asking the court to enforce the preliminary injunction and make clear that the Trump Administration cannot threaten medical providers or hospitals’ federal funding for providing necessary gender-affirming medical care while the injunction is in place.”
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PFLAG v. Trump

LGBTQ Rights
PFLAG v. Trump
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Educators, Ƶ, NEA-NH, and GLAD Law Sue New Hampshire Over Yet Another Unconstitutional Attack on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
CONCORD, N.H. — A diverse group of educators and advocacy groups filed a federal lawsuit today challenging a new anti-equity, anti-inclusion, and anti-diversity law in New Hampshire, which became effective on July 1, 2025, after being signed into law by Governor Ayotte in late June. The law, contained within House Bill 2’s budget provisions, seeks to ban diversity, equity, and inclusion programs pertaining to race, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, and disability in New Hampshire schools (including both K-12 public schools as well as both public and private colleges and universities) and public entities like police departments and libraries. According to the lawsuit, this law radically contradicts federal civil rights laws that protect the rights of students with disabilities, violates the First Amendment rights of educators and students, and is vague and ambiguous under the United States and New Hampshire Constitutions. Megan Tuttle, NEA-New Hampshire president, stated, “All Granite State children deserve a high-quality education, safe and welcoming public schools, and the support they need to thrive. We know diversity, equity, and inclusion programs and initiatives are not only legally required in certain contexts but also create a sense of belonging where all students can feel comfortable sharing their ideas and stories. Vague and confusing laws that have the effect of censoring or limiting educators’ abilities to teach and accommodate students who may have special education needs can undermine the high-quality education that students deserve. New Hampshire educators are standing together against HB 2’s unconstitutional attack on those programs and standing up to politicians’ overreach into our classrooms. Our profession should be guided by what’s best for our students, not the threat of funding restrictions and punishment. We will never stop working to make sure every child feels safe, seen, and is prepared for the future.” The lawsuit was brought by the state’s largest educator union, National Education Association – New Hampshire (NEA-NH), four school districts (Oyster River Cooperative School District, the Dover School District, the Somersworth School District, and the Grantham School District), trainer and consultant for diversity, equity, and inclusion James M. McKim, Jr., diversity, equity, and inclusion administrator and psychology professor Dottie Morris, and New Hampshire Outright, a nonprofit that provides training in public schools and entities on creating environments of inclusion and belonging for LGBTQ+ students. They are represented by lawyers from a broad coalition of organizations and law firms, including the Ƶ of New Hampshire, the national Ƶ’s Disability Rights Program and Racial Justice Program, National Education Association-New Hampshire (NEA-NH), GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD Law), and Drummond Woodsum & MacMahon. Devon Chaffee, executive director of the Ƶ of New Hampshire, said, “This new law threatens to revoke critical public funding from Granite State schools using vague criteria unless they cease programming and policies aimed at fostering equitable and inclusive environments for all – and that’s unconstitutional. Just like with our other two lawsuits, we will continue to fight these unwarranted and unconstitutional attacks on diversity and inclusion efforts and our right to learn.” The law does not just seek to prohibit diversity, equity, and inclusion in public entities and public schools, but it also seeks to strip away millions of dollars in critical state (and possibly federal) public funding if K-12 public school districts guess wrong as to how the New Hampshire Department of Education interprets the vague law’s provisions. According to one estimate, state aid to school districts could amount to more than $1 billion annually. John Shea, the superintendent of the Somersworth School District, said, “Looking at HB2’s attacks on diversity, equity, and inclusion, I’m worried that our legislature and our politicians may have lost sight of what these three words actually represent -- and just how important they are to our public education system. ‘Diversity’ simply is who we are here in Somersworth. It’s not a program, initiative or ideology. It cannot be legislated away. And equity -- or more particularly ‘equitable opportunity’ -- is fundamental to the very idea of universal public education. As is ‘inclusiveness,’ one of our community’s most cherished values. We strive for a welcoming environment for all, one that is strengthened by diverse perspectives. The State’s attacks on diversity, equity, and inclusion are an attack on all of this. Special education, ESOL programs (English for Speakers of Other Languages), and the free and reduced meals program included -- among many other examples. 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This foundation will allow our students to become dynamic global citizens as they adapt to a rapidly changing world.’ HB2’s vague ban on, for example, 'critical race theory’ and ‘any program, policy, training, or initiative that classifies individuals based on a characteristic identified under RSA 354-A:1’—namely, age, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, race, creed, color, marital status, familial status, mental or physical disability, religion or national origin—’for the purpose of achieving demographic outcomes, rather than treating individuals equally under the law’ makes me question whether the N.H. 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We hope this legal action will defend our right to deliver a high-quality public school education and support a democratic, informed, and engaged community as we work together to protect our children’s future.” Christine Downing, the superintendent of the Grantham School District, said, “The Grantham School District is taking a proactive stance to protect its students and educational programs by challenging the diversity, equity, and inclusion prohibition language of HB2. The District is committed to providing a high-quality education that prepares students for a diverse, global society, grounded in principles of inclusion and equity. Due to a severe lack of clarity regarding what constitutes ‘DEI-related programs, initiatives, policies, and training,’ the District believes it's essential to seek legal action. 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New HampshireAug 2025
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+2 Issues
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Press ReleaseAug 2025
LGBTQ Rights
Tenth Circuit Rejects Challenge From Families Against Oklahoma Ban on Best Practice Medical Care
OKLAHOMA CITY – Following the Supreme Court’s ruling in U.S. v. Skrmetti upholding a ban on gender-affirming medical care for transgender youth, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals has rejected a challenge to Oklahoma’s ban brought by transgender youth, their families, and their medical providers. The following is a joint statement from the Ƶ, the Ƶ of Oklahoma, and Lambda Legal: “Yesterday’s ruling is a devastating outcome for transgender youth and their families across Oklahoma and another tragic result of the Supreme Court’s errant and harmful ruling in Skrmetti. Oklahoma’s ban is openly discriminatory and provably harmful to the transgender youth of this state, putting political dogma above parents, their children, and their family doctors. While we and our clients consider our next steps, we want all transgender people and their families across Oklahoma to know we will never stop fighting for the future they deserve and their freedom to be themselves.” In a lawsuit filed by the Ƶ, the Ƶ of Oklahoma, and Lambda Legal, a group of families with transgender adolescents and a medical provider who supports trans youth assert SB 613 unjustly and unfairly targets them and gender-affirming health care in violation of their rights under Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment and Section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act. The lawsuit also alleges that the September 2022 decision to stop providing gender-affirming care to transgender adolescents at Oklahoma University hospitals to maintain access to COVID funding relief violated both the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment and Section 1557 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. SB 613 bans all forms of gender-affirming medical treatment for transgender youth and threatens providers who violate the law with a felony conviction and discipline from their professional licensing boards. Today’s ruling from the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals can be found here.Court Case: Poe v. DrummondAffiliate: Oklahoma