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SCOTUS to Weigh Female Sports
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The U.S. Supreme Court in Washington on Jan. 12, 2026. (Madalina Kilroy/The Epoch Times)
By Epoch Times Staff
1/13/2026Updated: 1/13/2026

Selina Soule was a high school track and field champion in Connecticut, holding multiple state conference titles and school records.

But when male athletes who identified as transgender started competing against her, Soule said her prospects of winning diminished.

“It didn’t matter how much time I put in, in practice; how much extra effort I put in. There was nothing I could do to win the race,” Soule, who graduated from Glastonbury High School in 2020, told The Epoch Times.

Soule’s sentiments have been common in the ongoing national debate surrounding males competing in female sports.

The Supreme Court is today set to weigh in on the issue by hearing cases challenging state laws barring boys from competing in girls’ sports.

In two cases to be heard back to back, the high court will examine allegations by male students who identify as transgender that West Virginia and Idaho illegally discriminated against them by banning their participation in girls’ sports.

The cases—Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J.—are expected to yield rulings on whether the state laws violate the Constitution and federal civil rights law.

Depending on how the justices decide, the lawsuits could make it easier for states across the country to maintain the sex-segregation some female athletes say is critical for sports.

According to the left-leaning Movement Advancement Project, 27 states have enacted bans such as the ones being considered by the Supreme Court. Some states have encountered federal court blocks.

Those included Idaho and West Virginia, which federal appeals courts have ruled they acted illegally discriminatory based on sex and “transgender status.”

But female athletes say their interests are not being respected when males compete against them.

A recent study by the right-leaning Concerned Women for America showed that since the mid-1980s, women have been deprived of more than 1,900 gold medals by men competing in female categories.

An amicus brief from 102 female athletes told the court that “female athletes across the country, at all levels of sports, stand on the precipice of permanently losing their access to equal opportunity and safety in sports.”

“Based on their biological sex, they are at risk of being pushed aside in law and in life in a permanently damaging and irreversible way.”

Macy Petty, a former high school volleyball player, told The Epoch Times, “We’ve come to this point that men have infiltrated women’s sports to the degree where women are walking up to the court wondering if they will actually have the privilege of only playing against women.”

Petty, who participated in countless matches across the country, graduated from Northwestern High School in South Carolina in 2020. She trained in volleyball for seven years and had competed in hundreds of matches across the country by 2018.

That year, she attended an event where college recruiters were in attendance to recruit gifted female athletes and reward them with scholarships. As she walked onto the volleyball court, she was shocked to see that she was matched with a male.

“The only emotion that I knew was pure confusion,” Petty told The Epoch Times.

Countless others, including Alliance Defending Freedom President Kristen Waggoner, share Petty’s critical approach to male participation.

Although “compassion and respect needs to occur for all children,” Waggoner said during a Jan. 8 press briefing, the rights of young women must not be ignored in that process. The organization led by Waggoner, who played volleyball in high school, is helping Idaho and West Virginia defend their laws in court.

The justices are expected to focus on two legal provisions: the equal protection clause of the Constitution and Title IX of the Civil Rights Act. The first generally guarantees equal protection under the law, while the latter prohibits sex-based discrimination in educational institutions that receive federal funding.

“The stakes are high,” an amicus brief from athletic officials and coaches of female athletes reads. They warned that rendering the laws unconstitutional “would not only revoke the very rights and protections that specifically secure women’s access to school athletics, but would do so in order to extend those rights and protections to men.”

Allowing male participation was “blindly adhering to platitudes of equality,” they stated. 

Other coaches have argued that “allowing transgender women to participate in women’s sports, consistent with applicable rules, neither poses safety concerns nor gives transgender women an unfair advantage.”

The West Virginia case is distinctive in that it invites the justices to rule on Title IX, in addition to the equal protection clause. Given Title IX’s history and how the Supreme Court has handled similar laws, legal experts have suggested it could bolster female athletes’ opposition towards male participation.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit ruled in 2024 that the state’s law treated B.P.J., the plaintiff in the case who sued West Virginia as an 11-year-old, improperly on the basis of sex and therefore violated Title IX.

However, others have argued that Congress had a different intent when passing Title IX. An amicus brief from nearly 50 members of Congress argued that Title IX was passed in 1975 to prevent discrimination against women and that the first Title IX regulations adopted a binary view of sex.

“It has to do with safety and for bathrooms and locker rooms, it has to do with the anatomy that is exposed in athletics. And so that’s why sex matters; what a person thinks about their gender doesn’t matter,” Randall Wenger, chief counsel of the Independence Law Center, told The Epoch Times. “If you were looking to preserve athletic opportunities, you do need to divide it on the basis of sex.”

By contrast, a group of Title IX scholars told the court that Title IX’s language was an inconsistent “categorical ban that excludes all transgender girls from participating on girls’ sports teams.” The justices are focusing on participation in sports teams but their reasoning could extend to segregation of locker rooms and bathrooms.

In 2022, Kylee Alons, then a swimmer at North Carolina State University, became increasingly anxious at the thought that Lia Thomas, a male competing with women, would potentially knock some of her teammates out of the competition.

“It wasn’t until I was in the locker room, actually the first day, that I realized, ‘Oh, I had never even given thought to the fact that I would have to be changing with a man in my locker room,’” Alons told The Epoch Times.

“And I think until you’re in that position, you don’t realize how uncomfortable and how violating that feels.”

Both sides of the debate have pointed to the Supreme Court’s 2020 decision in Bostock v. Clayton County, which could bear on the justices’ decision-making.

In Justice Neil Gorsuch’s majority opinion, he said that “discrimination based on homosexuality or transgender status necessarily entails discrimination based on sex.”

That case, however, focused on a different civil rights law—Title VII—and Gorsuch explicitly distanced his decision from disputes about locker rooms.

Stacy Robinson and Sam Dorman 

BOOKMARKS

President Donald Trump “might” veto a bill extending Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies if it reaches his desk, The Epoch Times’ Bill Pan reported. The U.S. Senate has yet to vote on the measure as a bipartisan Senate group discusses a possible compromise.

Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.) on Jan. 12 sued War Secretary Pete Hegseth and other defense officials over efforts to investigate and punish him for recent comments. The Epoch Times’ Zachary Stieber reported that Kelly’s suit alleges a violation of the U.S. Constitution over the actions, coming in response to a video Kelly participated in encouraging soldiers to disobey “illegal orders.”

Trump and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) discussed affordability and interest rates in a call on Monday following the senator’s wide-ranging address that morning about economic stances within the Democratic Party. The Epoch Times’ Jackson Richman reported that Warren told Trump that “Congress can pass legislation to cap credit card rates if he will actually fight for it.”

Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) became the second Republican to support a plan to block any Federal Reserve Board nominees proposed by Trump after the Department of Justice launched a criminal investigation into Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, The Epoch Times’ Tricia McLaughlin reported. Trump’s decision to prosecute Powell sent shockwaves through the American political community, with critics accusing the president of attempting to weaponize federal law enforcement against a political rival.  

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