The candidatesâ views differ on men in womenâs sports, as well as whether children should be able to undergo gender-related medical and surgical procedures.
People who identify as transgender make up about 1.6 percent of the U.S. population, the Pew Research Center found in 2022.
Yet issues surrounding transgenderism have evoked robust responses among the wider population.
People have been debating whether men who identify as women should participate in womenâs sports or use womenâs locker rooms and bathrooms.
And, across the country, parents have objected to school systems fosteringâand concealingâtheir childrenâs wishes to âswitchâ genders.
As voter attention is focused largely on the economy and border security, transgender-related issues remain a simmering concern for some as the presidential campaign rapidly heads toward the Nov. 5 election.
One of the most polarizing issues revealed in the study: About 92 percent of Trump supporters said they believe that a personâs sex is determined at birth; among Harris supporters that number is 39 percent.
About 58 percent of Pew respondents said they strongly favor sex-based segregation in athletics based on participantsâ biology, rather than declared identity.
Harrisâs Views
As the Democratic presidential nominee, Harris has downplayed transgender issues even though she previously described herself as a staunch advocate for people who identify as transgender.
She gave a similar response to NBC on Oct. 22.
Harris also said: âTransition treatment is a medical necessity, and I will direct all federal agencies responsible for providing essential medical care to deliver transition treatment.â
She also said in 2019 that she is in favor of using taxpayer money to cover the costs of gender-altering procedures for incarcerated illegal immigrants. She made that statement in a candidate questionnaire from the ACLU, and first reported by CNN in September.

Lawmakers listen as parents speak about the prospect of their children competing against transgender athletes in school sports at the Utah State Capitol in Salt Lake City on March 25, 2022. Samuel Metz/AP Photo
The questionnaire asked whether the candidate would use presidential authority to provide âgender transitionâ treatment for people, âincluding those in prison and immigration detention.â
Harris checked a box with âyes.â Then she wrote, in part: âI support policies ensuring that federal prisoners and detainees are able to obtain medically necessary care for gender transition, including surgical care, while incarcerated or detained.â
She said she would direct all relevant federal agencies âto deliver transition treatment.â
In the 2019 interview with the National Center for Transgender Equality Action Fund, Harris said she used the power of her former office as California attorney general to advance âthe agendaâ of the âmovement.â She served in that role for six years, beginning in 2011.
Harris also said that she intervened in âa specific caseâ after learning that state prison officials âwere standing in the way of [gender-altering] surgeryâ for prisoners.
Harris said she âworked behind the scenesâ to help that person âget the services she was deserving.â
Inmate Shiloh Heavenly Quine, a male formerly known as Rodney James Quine who began identifying as female, was a convicted killer serving a life sentence.
Doctors deemed sex-reassignment surgery for Quine was âmedically necessary,â but California prison officials balked.
In 2015, Quine settled a federal lawsuit against California, paving the way to undergo âsex-reassignment surgery,â a federal court record shows. The surgery was completed in 2017.
After that court fight, Harris worked to ensure the state changed its policy âso that every transgender inmate in the prison system would have access to the medical care that they desired and need,â she said in a 2019 interview.
Harris called that new policy âhistoric,â saying she thought it may be the first of its kind in the United States.
The Epoch Times sought comment from the Harris campaign but received no response prior to publication.
Trumpâs Views
Trump has repeatedly vowed to âkeep men out of womenâs sportsââa line that invariably draws loud applause and cheers at his rallies.
Trump has repeatedly stated that he is against âtransgender insanityâ being taught to children in schools. Trump also denounces schools and therapists secretly âtransitioningâ children without parental consent.
Notably, in 2023, Trump denounced the procedures as âchild mutilationâ as he locked horns with Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, a fellow Republican, over the latterâs veto of a state law banning transgender surgeries for minors and cross-sex sports competitions.
He opposes the Biden-Harris administrationâs âgender affirming careâ for minors, and calls for any health care provider involved in transitioning children to be terminated from Medicare and Medicaid.
He also wants to strip federal funding from school districts that suggest children can be âtrapped in the wrong body.â

Pennsylvania State University swimmer Lia Thomas (2nd L)âa male who identifies as femaleâand Yale swimmer Iszac Henig (L)âa female who identifies as maleâpose with their medals after placing first and second in the 100-yard freestyle swimming race at the 2022 Ivy League Women’s Swimming & Diving Championships at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., on Feb. 19, 2022. Joseph Prezioso/Getty Images
Title IX Battle
The BidenâHarris administration has implemented pro-transgender policies across multiple federal agencies since taking office in 2021.
The administration has worked to change Title IX to expand sex discrimination protection to students who identify as the opposite sex in schools, which would, among other things, allow males to play female sports and use female restrooms and locker rooms.
Title IX is part of the Education Amendments of 1972. The legislation prohibits sex-based discrimination in any school or any other education program that receives funding from the federal government. Its early advocates meant for it to protect women from discrimination in education based on sex and provide them with equal opportunities.
In April, the Department of Education finalized a rule redefining the meaning of âsexâ within that legislation to include âgender identity.â That meant that men who identify as women must be given the same opportunities as women. Schools and colleges that fail to comply with Title IX stand to lose federal dollars.
State Laws
In a significant development earlier this month, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to consider whether to uphold a Tennessee law that bans gender-related medical and surgical procedures for minors.
Activists advocating for people who identify as transgender strongly oppose the law. But attorneys general from at least 22 of the nationâs 50 states support it.
âChildren do not have the capacity to consent to the long-term devastating health consequences of surgical and chemical castration,â Lundstrum told The Epoch Times.
âTrump will help stop the attack on children and the emotional blackmail of their terrified parents.â
Lundstrum said Harrisâs past actions indicate blanket support for transgenderism.
After a series of legal battles, Lundstrumâs 2021 Arkansas law remains âstalledâ at a federal appeals court, she said. Its fate hinges on the Supreme Courtâs ruling on the Tennessee case.

Chloe Cole, who speaks about surgeries and medication she took to try to live as a boy, speaks in support of the Protect Children’s Innocence Act as Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) looks on outside the U.S. Capitol on Sept. 20, 2022. Terri Wu/The Epoch Times
Almost half the states have passed laws restricting transgender medical and surgical procedures for minors, according to the Movement Advancement Project (MAP) a nonprofit transgender advocacy group.
Those laws are now being enforced in states such as Texas.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton recently announced legal action against two doctors allegedly involved in prescribing hormones for minors.
The state is seeking fines against both doctors who stand to lose their medical licenses under the law if found guilty of violating the law.
Fifteen blue states and the District of Columbia have gone in the other direction and passed âtransgender shield laws,â which shield minors seeking to transition and doctors who help them, according to MAP.
These laws protect transgender-identifying individuals or doctors from civil or criminal charges stemming from the state where medical procedures to transition are banned.
States such as California, Colorado, and Maine have passed extensive transgender protection legislation.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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