U.S. Supreme Court building with American flag and passport overlay, illustrating court decision on sex markers in passports.
Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Supreme Court allows Trump policy requiring sex-at-birth markers on U.S. passports to take effect

Picha iliyoundwa na AI
Imethibitishwa ukweli

In an unsigned emergency order on Nov. 6, 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to enforce a rule requiring U.S. passports to list sex as assigned at birth, pausing a lower-court injunction. Justices Ketanji Brown Jackson, Sonia Sotomayor, and Elena Kagan dissented.

On Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025, the Supreme Court granted the government’s request for an emergency stay in Trump v. Orr, permitting the administration to enforce its requirement that new U.S. passports display sex assigned at birth while litigation continues. The order, which did not disclose individual votes, stayed a class-wide injunction issued by a federal district court in Massachusetts and left in place dissents from the Court’s three liberal justices. The case proceeds in the First Circuit, and the stay remains effective during the appeal and any subsequent petition to the Supreme Court.

The unsigned order said the government is likely to succeed on the merits and emphasized that passports are government documents with foreign-affairs implications. It concluded the government would suffer irreparable injury if the lower-court injunction remained in force. The Court also analogized the listing of sex at birth on passports to the listing of country of birth as a historical fact, while rejecting arguments that the policy on its face discriminates against transgender people.

Background
- For more than three decades, the State Department allowed transgender Americans to obtain passports with sex markers matching their gender identity: surgical proof was required until 2010, a doctor’s certification sufficed thereafter, and in 2021 applicants could self-select “M,” “F,” or “X” without medical documentation.
- In January 2025, President Donald Trump signed Executive Order 14168, directing agencies to recognize only two sexes and to ensure government IDs, including passports, reflect “biological” sex. The State Department subsequently reversed course for new issuances, while previously issued passports remained valid until expiration.

Lower-court rulings
- In April 2025, U.S. District Judge Julia Kobick granted a preliminary injunction for named plaintiffs, finding they were likely to succeed on claims that the new policy violated the Administrative Procedure Act and raising serious equal-protection concerns. In June, after certifying classes, the court extended relief to a broader group of affected applicants. The First Circuit later declined to stay that injunction pending appeal.

Dissent
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, joined by Justices Sotomayor and Kagan, criticized the majority’s intervention at the stay stage, arguing the government had not shown it would be harmed by temporarily maintaining the prior policy, whereas the plaintiffs faced immediate, concrete harms if the new rule took effect. Calling the Court’s approach “Such senseless sidestepping of the obvious equitable outcome has become an unfortunate pattern,” she also pointed to language in the January executive order as evidence of animus and noted the policy shift followed 33 years of contrary practice.

What comes next
The stay does not resolve the merits. The First Circuit appeal will continue, and the Supreme Court could be asked to review the case after a final appellate ruling. In the interim, the administration’s policy governs new passport applications.

Makala yanayohusiana

Illustration depicting the U.S. Supreme Court reviewing a challenge to President Trump's birthright citizenship executive order, with three infants and their noncitizen parents in the foreground.
Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Supreme Court to Hear Challenge to Trump Birthright Citizenship Order

Imeripotiwa na AI Picha iliyoundwa na AI Imethibitishwa ukweli

Three infants born to noncitizen parents are at the center of Barbara v. Trump, a class‑action lawsuit challenging President Donald Trump’s executive order seeking to limit birthright citizenship for some children born in the United States. The Supreme Court has agreed to review the dispute over the order, which targets babies whose mothers lack legal status or are in the country on temporary visas and whose fathers are neither U.S. citizens nor lawful permanent residents.

The U.S. Supreme Court is set to rule on President Donald Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship, drawing on 1960s precedents that affirm citizenship for those born on American soil regardless of parental status. These cases, often overlooked, involved denationalization efforts that affected over 120,000 Americans between 1946 and 1967. The rulings unanimously upheld the 14th Amendment's guarantee of citizenship by birth.

Imeripotiwa na AI Imethibitishwa ukweli

A federal judge has struck down portions of a Biden-era regulation interpreting federal health care nondiscrimination law to cover gender identity, siding with Tennessee and 14 other states that sued the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

In 2025, the US Supreme Court's conservative supermajority repeatedly supported President Donald Trump's expansive agenda, clearing paths for executive actions on immigration, the economy, and electoral power. This alignment, often without explanation via the shadow docket, raised questions about the court's role in democracy. Legal analysts Dahlia Lithwick and Mark Joseph Stern discussed the implications in a year-end podcast, highlighting the focus on voting rights cases.

Imeripotiwa na AI

The US Supreme Court heard oral arguments in two cases challenging state laws that bar transgender girls from participating in girls' school sports teams. The cases, Little v. Hecox from Idaho and West Virginia v. B.P.J., focus on whether these bans violate the Constitution and Title IX. Justices appeared divided, with a majority seeming inclined to uphold the restrictions.

Advocates opposing gender ideology are pressing President Donald Trump to link federal child welfare funding to policies rejecting such ideology. They have drafted an executive order to redefine child abuse and protect parents who refuse to affirm their children's gender transitions. The effort highlights cases where parents faced investigations or lost custody for their stance.

Imeripotiwa na AI Imethibitishwa ukweli

U.S. District Judge Beryl A. Howell has ruled that immigration officers in the District of Columbia must have probable cause before carrying out warrantless arrests, a decision that reins in aggressive enforcement tactics and pointedly questions a recent Supreme Court order that expanded immigration ‘roving patrols’ elsewhere.

 

 

 

Tovuti hii inatumia vidakuzi

Tunatumia vidakuzi kwa uchambuzi ili kuboresha tovuti yetu. Soma sera ya faragha yetu kwa maelezo zaidi.
Kataa