Issue
In 2021, West Virginia enacted the Save Women’s Sports Act, requiring student athletes to participate on teams consistent with their sex assigned at birth. As the Supreme Court evaluates whether this law violates the 14th Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause, it will consider the longstanding principle that some groups require protection from harmful actions taken by the majority. Key to this analysis is an assessment of the group’s political power: their ability to protect themselves through the democratic process. This amicus brief offers empirical data documenting the political power of the transgender community, measured by factors such as the size of the population, history of discrimination in society, barriers to voting, economic vulnerability, and exclusion from the political process.
Impact
Approximately 2.1 million adults (0.8% of adults) and 724,000 youth ages 13–17 (3.3% of youth) in the U.S. identify as transgender. Transgender people face pervasive, well-documented discrimination across many areas of life, including employment, housing, education, and public accommodations. They are four times more likely than cisgender people to experience violent victimization. They are also substantially more likely to experience poverty, rely on Medicaid as their primary health insurance, and receive SNAP benefits. In addition, an estimated 210,800 transgender adults lack identification documents that accurately reflect their name or gender, and research shows transgender people are five times more likely than cisgender people to encounter problems when attempting to vote.
Summary
Scholars present objective, empirical evidence showing the transgender community’s profound lack of political power, rooted in a history of discrimination, economic vulnerability, and exclusion from the political process. As a result, the community’s rights often rise and fall with the shifting will of the political majority. In the words of one district court, “Being kicked around like a football by whatever team has possession is the opposite of meaningful political power.” These conditions demonstrate the absence of meaningful political power and strongly support the need for heightened judicial scrutiny under equal protection principles.