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DOJ Says Sex Discrimination Law Doesn't Apply To Transgender People

Jeff Sessions reversed Obama-era guidance on sex discrimination against transgender people in the workplace.
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Attorney General Jeff Sessions says the section of the 1964 Civil Rights Act banning sex discrimination in the workplace does not apply to transgender people.

Sessions announced that stance in a memo Wednesday. It reverses 2014 guidance from former Attorney General Eric Holder, who said the same law ensured workplace protections for transgender workers.  

Holder said Title VII of the Civil Rights Act extends protections to anyone who's faced "discrimination based on gender identity, including transgender status." 

But Sessions says the Obama administration's interpretation was not what Congress intended when it passed the law, noting the act doesn't mention gender identity. A Justice Department spokesman said in a statement, "The Department of Justice cannot expand the law beyond what Congress has provided."

Multiple federal courts adhered to the Obama administration's guidance, ruling in favor of transgender people who said they'd been discriminated against in the workplace.

An attorney for LGBTQ group Lambda Legaltold Buzzfeed, "This memo is not actually a reflection of the law as it is — it's a reflection of what the DOJ wishes the law were."

The reversal is in line with others issued by the Trump administration.

President Donald Trump recently directed the Department of Defense to overturn an Obama-era rule allowing transgender people to enlist in the military. And in February, the DOJ and the Department of Education withdrew guidance allowing transgender students to use bathrooms corresponding with their gender identity. 

Sessions said the new rule will apply to "all pending and future matters." But he might be headed for a legal fight. 

In response to Sessions' memo, the executive director of the National Center for Transgender Equality said, "Courts have repeatedly ruled that transgender people are protected by sex discrimination laws in employment, education, housing and healthcare. We'll see him in court."