Supreme Court to review state bans on transgender athletes in girls’ sports
The Supreme Court agreed Thursday to hear a case that will determine whether joining girls’ and women’s sports teams at public schools.
The justices are set to hear challenges to laws in Idaho and West Virginia after lower court rulings sided with transgender students who sued when they were blocked from competing.
“I am optimistic that after hearing the case, the Supreme Court will restore sanity to athletics and allow West Virginia to enforce its commonsense law that prevents boys from competing in girl’s sports,” Mountain State Gov. Patrick Morrisey fired off in an X post.

Twenty-seven states have passed laws in recent years that restrict participation in female sports for male-to-female trans students.
In Idaho and West Virginia specifically, state laws specify that sports teams at public schools are based on “biological sex” and ban “students of the male sex” from joining female athletic teams.
The challenge to the West Virginia law was brought by Becky Pepper-Jackson in 2021 after her middle school banned her from joining the girls’ cross country and track teams.
Pepper-Jackson has been taking puberty-blocking medication and has publicly identified as a girl since she was in the third grade.