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Education Department Marks First Year Enforcing Trump Order Restricting Trans Athletes in Women’s Sports

The U.S. Department of Education is publicly marking just over a year of enforcing President Donald Trump’s 2025 'Keeping Men Out of Women's Sports' executive order, claiming progress in barring transgender women and girls (described by the agency as 'biological males') from competing in female sports categories. Under the administration’s pressure, the NCAA and the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee have updated policies to restrict women’s competition to athletes assigned female at birth, and schools such as Harvard and Trinity University have revised or removed prior transgender inclusion policies. The department has also secured resolution agreements over alleged Title IX violations with the University of Pennsylvania and Wagner College tied to trans participation on women’s teams, while opening additional investigations into districts in Colorado, New York, California and the University of Nevada, Reno. At the same time, the Justice Department is suing state agencies in Maine and California for allowing transgender athletes in girls’ high school sports, and Education Secretary Linda McMahon has threatened San Jose State University with loss of federal funds and a DOJ referral if it does not address alleged Title IX violations this month. The campaign underscores how the administration is using federal civil-rights enforcement and funding leverage to reshape national policy on transgender participation in women’s sports, even as opponents argue the effort itself violates Title IX and equal-protection principles.

Transgenderism/Transexualism Title IX and Women’s Sports Policy Donald Trump Administration Education Policy

📌 Key Facts

  • President Trump signed the 'Keeping Men Out of Women's Sports' / 'No Men in Women’s Sports' executive order in early February 2025, and the Education Department is now touting a year of enforcement.
  • The NCAA and the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee have changed their rules to limit women’s competition to athletes assigned female at birth in response to the administration’s stance.
  • The Education Department has resolution agreements with the University of Pennsylvania and Wagner College over prior Title IX violations tied to transgender athletes on women’s teams.
  • Harvard removed its transgender inclusion policy from its handbook and Trinity University adopted a policy restricting women’s sports to those assigned female at birth after NCAA changes.
  • The Justice Department is suing state agencies in Maine and California over high school sports policies that still allow transgender girls to compete, and San Jose State University faces a federal funding ultimatum and possible DOJ referral if it does not resolve alleged Title IX violations by the end of the month.

📊 Relevant Data

Post-puberty, males have 20-30 times higher testosterone levels than females, leading to significant advantages in strength, speed, and power in athletic performance.

The Biological Basis of Sex Differences in Athletic Performance — PubMed

Transgender women remain about 50% stronger than cisgender women even after 12 months of testosterone suppression.

Transgender Women in the Female Category of Sport — PMC - NIH

Transgender athletes make up less than 1.3% of the overall college athlete population.

The Impact of Transgender Sports Participation Bans on Transgender and Nonbinary Youth and Adults — Williams Institute

Transgender identification among college students dropped from 6.8% in 2022-2023 to 3.6% in 2025.

Transgender 'trend' sharply declining on American college campuses, new analysis finds — Fox News

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