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House Panel Advances Women’s Museum Bill After Adding 'Biological Women'‑Only Language

The House Administration Committee voted 7–4 along party lines to advance a bill authorizing land on the National Mall for the proposed Smithsonian American Women’s History Museum after Republicans adopted an amendment requiring the museum to honor only 'biological women' and barring depiction of any 'biological male as a female.' Bill sponsor Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, R‑N.Y., who does not sit on the committee, said all four Democrats voted against moving the measure once the amendment was added, even though two of them—Reps. Terri Sewell and Julie Johnson—were among the bill’s 231 original co‑sponsors. Ranking Member Joe Morelle, D‑N.Y., countered that Republicans had replaced a bipartisan proposal with one that hands President Trump sweeping authority over the museum’s location, shifts control to politically appointed boards, omits a paired American Latino museum, and inserts what he called 'ideological poison pills.' The fight turns what had been a broadly supported museum plan into another front in the national clash over how federal institutions define sex and gender, with conservative activists like Riley Gaines cheering the amendment online and Democrats warning it weaponizes a cultural museum to exclude transgender women.

Congress and Federal Museums Transgenderism/Transexualism

📌 Key Facts

  • House Administration Committee advanced the Smithsonian American Women’s History Museum land‑authorization bill on a 7–4 party‑line vote.
  • A Republican amendment states the museum must be dedicated to 'biological women' and may not depict any 'biological male as a female.'
  • All four Democrats on the committee, including two prior co‑sponsors, voted no after the amended language and broader structural changes were adopted.
  • Ranking Member Joe Morelle says the revised bill gives President Trump 'unchecked authority' over the site, empowers politically loyal boards, drops a Latino museum counterpart, and adds 'ideological poison pills.'

📊 Relevant Data

Approximately 1.0% of the US population aged 13 and older (about 2.8 million people) identify as transgender, with higher rates among youth aged 13-17 at 3.3%.

How Many Adults and Youth Identify as Transgender in the United States? — Williams Institute

Transgender identification among US adults has increased from 0.6% in 2016 to 0.8% in 2023, with estimates showing steady or rising trends, though some surveys indicate fluctuations or declines in specific subgroups like young adults.

New estimate: 2.8 million people aged 13 and older identify as transgender in the US — Williams Institute

In a 2022 survey of transgender adults, racial breakdown showed 56% White, 14% Latino/Hispanic, 8% Black/African American, 7% Asian/Asian American or Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, 13% Biracial/Multiracial, and 1% American Indian or Alaska Native.

Early Insights: A Report of the 2022 U.S. Transgender Survey — National Center for Transgender Equality

Recent studies on transgender youth show low desistance rates, with 1% to 9% of adolescents detransitioning or desisting, and around 7.3% retransitioning at least once after an average of 5 years.

Two numbers before SCOTUS purport to show trans youth 'regret' transitioning. Here's what the research really says. — PolitiFact

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