States May Exclude Trans Kids from Sports: Supreme Court

Each week, Rewire News Group editors scour headlines nationwide—from lawsuits over abortion access to LGBTQ+ rights—to bring you the most urgent news in reproductive justice. Here’s the past week’s latest news.

States May Exclude Trans Kids from Sports: Supreme Court

Each week, Rewire News Group editors scour headlines nationwide—from lawsuits over abortion access to LGBTQ+ rights—to bring you the most urgent news in reproductive justice. Here’s the past week’s latest news.

SCOTUS narrowly preserves birthright citizenship

The Supreme Court handed down its final decisions of the term last week, including two with major civil rights implications. In West Virginia v. B.P.J., the Court ruled that states banning trans people from joining sports teams based on their gender identity, rather than assigned sex at birth, does not violate the Equal Protection Clause or Title IX. In the high-profile birthright citizenship case, the Court affirmed by a narrow margin that anyone born on U.S. soil is a citizen, regardless of their parents’ citizenship status.

New Illinois law keeps abortion records private

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker signed legislation on June 24 that protects abortion patients’ medical records from being shared with out-of-state entities. The Reproductive Health Records Privacy Act shields patients who get abortion care in Illinois from potential punishment in other states that ban the procedure. “Health-care records exist to treat patients, not surveil and punish them,” Pritzker said. Illinois bans abortion at the point of fetal viability, which generally occurs around 24 to 26 weeks.

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Iowa, Mississippi, and Tennessee see abortion restrictions take effect

Medication abortion and HPV vaccine access has been further restricted in Iowa. Under new laws, which took effect this week, minors must get parental permission to be vaccinated against STIs, and abortion drugs must be dispensed in person. Similar laws took effect in other states: Mississippi made distributing or intending to distribute abortion pills punishable by up to ten years in prison, and Tennessee’s AG can now fine and civilly charge people who violate the state’s in-person dispensing requirement.

This news roundup is adapted from our newsletter, Rewire Weekly. Sign up here to get the latest reproductive rights news, expert analysis, and a peek into the RNG newsroom—fresh to your inbox.

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