The NCAA officially changed its gender eligibility policy to ban all biological men from women's sports the day after President Donald Trump signed an executive order to address the issue.
The College Sports Administration announced a new participation policy Thursday afternoon for transgender student-athletes.
“Student-athletes assigned males at birth may not compete on female teams,” the new policy reads.
The new policy allows biological women to compete in male teams.
Previous policies in place in 2010 allowed biological men to compete in the female category after at least a year of testosterone suppression treatment.
Trump was in front of national girl and female athletes on Sports Day, Washington, D.C. In the Eastern Room of the White House, he signed an executive order for “Women's Sports Men Without Men.”
NCAA President Charlie Baker responded to the executive order in a statement later Wednesday, providing a “clear national standard,” which the NCAA committee will review and coordinate organizational policies in the coming days. He said measures will be taken.
“The NCAA is an organization of 1,100 universities from all 50 states that collectively register more than 50,000 student-athletes,” the statement said. “We strongly believe that clear, consistent, uniform eligibility standards, rather than contradictory state laws and patchwork of court decisions, will best serve student-athletes today, and that's why President Trump's orders are provides clear national standards.
“The NCAA Committee is considering an executive order and will take necessary steps to adjust the NCAA policy in the coming days, subject to further guidance from the administration. The association is intended to address all student-athletes. We will continue to help promote a welcoming environment on campus. We are looking for ways to support student-athletes affected by policy changes, so we are ready to support schools. Masu.”
Baker previously addressed concerns about the issue that female athletes must share teams and locker rooms with trans athletes at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in December. So Baker said that if female athletes don't share with transgender people, they have the option to find other accommodations, and that the NCAA policy that allows trans athletes to compete with women is based on federal standards. I insisted.
Previous policies have led to multiple lawsuits against the NCAA and its member schools. Former NCAA swimmer, the current conservative activist Rilege Inz, who is a lawsuit over the experience of competing with Transmar Rear Thomas in the 2022 national championship and sharing a locker room. She has joined several other female athletes influenced by the transcruification.
Another lawsuit was filed on Tuesday evening. It is said that Thomas's former Upenn teammates had advanced their own experience that they had to share the team and the locker room with Thomas, and had supplied the university manager and the PRO-Trans ideology.
Trump's Department of Education (DOE) has launched an investigation into potential Title IX violations that occurred in separate incidents at Thomas' situation, San Jose State University and the Massachusetts Interstate Governance Athletics Association (MIAA).
In San Jose State, transgender volleyball player Blair Fleming played three seasons with the women's team from 2022 to 24. However, unlike UPEN's handling of Thomas, SJSU administrators have said they have been saying Fleming's birth sex from other female players on the team, according to a lawsuit filed by 11 Mountain West volleyball players and a former SJSU assistant coach. It is said that he withheld the truth.
Additionally, OCR will actively review athletic participation policies in many schools to assess female athletes' integrity with Title IX protection, sources told Fox News Digital.
Last week, DOE informed K-12 schools and institutions of higher education that it would be reinstated to implement Title IX protection based on biological sex.
Recent New York Times/Ipsos surveys have believed that the majority of Americans, including the Democratic Party, should not be allowed to compete with transgender athletes in women's sports. Of the 2,128 votes, 79 % of the voted biological men, identified as women, should not be allowed to participate in women's sports.
Of the 1,025 specified Democrats or Democratic members, 67 % of the transgender athletes should not be allowed to compete with women.