GOP Tennessee leader ‘cautiously optimistic’ Supreme Court will uphold ban on trans treatments for minors: ‘Test case for the nation’
Tennessee Senate Majority Leader Jack Johnson is “cautiously optimistic” the Supreme Court will uphold the state ban he co-authored on transgender surgeries and hormone treatments for minors, describing the ongoing legal battle as a “test case for the nation.”
The high court is set to hold oral arguments on the matter this Wednesday in United States v. Skrmetti, a case that can help set a clear precedent amid a smattering of mixed decisions from the lower courts on similar state-level bans.
“Tennessee’s law that I sponsored will effectively be the test case for the nation. So we’re very excited, humbled and cautiously optimistic that the Supreme Court will see it as the Sixth Circuit did,” Johnson (R-Williamson) told The Post in an exclusive interview last week.
“By no means would I be so presumptuous as to predict what the Supreme Court will do. I have tremendous respect for the court,” he added. “What’s at stake is effectively the rights of states to regulate these types of medical procedures.”
Last year, the state legislature passed Senate Bill 0001, which restricts health care providers “from performing on a minor or administering to a minor a medical procedure if the performance or administration of the procedure is for the purpose of enabling a minor to identify with, or live as, a purported identity inconsistent with the minor’s sex.”
Minors can’t be held liable under that law, but their parents can if they “consented to the conduct that constituted the violation on behalf of the minor.” The state attorney general was also authorized to pursue fines against health care providers of $25,000 per violation.
