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Joe Biden signs order reversing Trump’s transgender military ban

It immediately prohibits any service member from being forced out of the military on the basis of gender identity.

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President Joe Biden has signed an order reversing a Trump-era Pentagon policy that largely barred transgender individuals from serving in the US military.

The new order, which Mr Biden signed in the Oval Office during a meeting with defence secretary Lloyd Austin, overturns a ban ordered by former president Donald Trump in a tweet during his first year in office.

It immediately prohibits any service member from being forced out of the military on the basis of gender identity.

Mr Biden’s order says that gender identity should not be a bar to military service.

The order says: “America is stronger, at home and around the world, when it is inclusive. The military is no exception. Allowing all qualified Americans to serve their country in uniform is better for the military and better for the country because an inclusive force is a more effective force. Simply put, it’s the right thing to do and is in our national interest.”

The order directs the departments of Defence and Homeland Security to take steps to implement the order for the military and the Coast Guard. And it says they must re-examine the records of service members who were discharged or denied re-enlistment due to gender identity issues under the previous policy.

It requires the departments to submit a report to the president on their progress within 60 days.

Mr Biden had been widely expected to quickly overturn Mr Trump’s policy. And the move was also backed by Mr Biden’s newly-confirmed defence secretary, retired Army General Lloyd Austin, who spoke of the need to overturn it during his Senate confirmation hearing last week.

Mr Austin said: “I support the president’s plan or plan to overturn the ban. If you’re fit and you’re qualified to serve and you can maintain the standards, you should be allowed to serve.”

Under Mr Biden’s new policy, transgender servicemembers will not be discharged based on gender identity, and they can serve in their preferred gender once their transition is complete and recorded in the defence reporting system.

The decision comes as Mr Biden plans to turn his attention to equity issues that he believes continue to shadow nearly all aspects of American life. Ahead of his inauguration, Mr Biden’s transition team circulated a memo from Ron Klain, now the White House chief of staff, that sketched out Mr Biden’s plan to use his first full week as president “to advance equity and support communities of colour and other underserved communities”.

The move to overturn the transgender ban is also the latest example of Mr Biden using executive authority in his first days as president to dismantle Mr Trump’s legacy. His early actions include orders to overturn a Trump administration ban on travellers from several predominantly Muslim countries, stop construction of the wall at the US-Mexico border, and launch an initiative to advance racial equity.

Former US President Donald Trump introduced the ban
Former US president Donald Trump introduced the ban (Luis M. Alvarez/AP)

After Mr Trump took office, however, his administration delayed the enlistment date and called for additional study to determine if allowing transgender individuals to serve would affect military readiness or effectiveness.

A few weeks later, Mr Trump caught military leaders by surprise, tweeting that the government would not accept or allow transgender individuals to serve “in any capacity” in the military. “Our military must be focused on decisive and overwhelming victory and cannot be burdened with the tremendous medical costs and disruption that transgender in the military would entail,” he wrote.

After a lengthy and complicated legal battle and additional reviews, the Defence Department in April 2019 approved the new policy that fell short of an all-out ban but barred transgender troops and military recruits from transitioning to another sex and required most individuals to serve in their birth gender.

Under that policy, currently serving transgender troops and anyone who had signed an enlistment contract before the effective date could continue with plans for hormone treatments and gender transition if they had been diagnosed with gender dysphoria.

But after that date, no-one with gender dysphoria who was taking hormones or has transitioned to another gender was allowed to enlist. Troops that were already serving and were diagnosed with gender dysphoria were required to serve in their birth gender and were barred from taking hormones or getting transition surgery.

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