Public opinion on LGBTQ+ issues appears to be shifting, with a new Gallup poll revealing that approximately four in 10 Americans consider changing one’s gender to be morally acceptable. This figure marks a decrease from nearly half of the population in 2021.
The rights of transgender individuals have emerged as a contentious political battleground in recent years.
Many Republican-controlled states have enacted legislation over the past five years to prohibit gender-affirming medical treatments for transgender minors, restrict bathroom access in schools, and bar transgender girls and women from certain sports competitions.
President Donald Trump has also pursued similar policies at the federal level through executive orders.
This week, one of those federal policies faced a significant setback.
A federal appeals court ruled that the military’s ban on transgender troops was illegal. This polling data was released just days after the Pentagon policy was deemed unlawful by a divided panel of federal appeals court judges, marking another legal challenge to President Donald Trump’s broad agenda.
The majority opinion, issued by a three-judge panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, concluded that the Trump administration’s policy was specifically designed to exclude individuals from military service based on their gender identity.
While the ban currently remains in effect, as the U.S. Supreme Court allowed its enforcement last year pending ongoing litigation, the panel’s new ruling would prevent current service members named in the lawsuit from being discharged.
However, it would not permit new transgender recruits to join. The judges have temporarily put their decision on hold to allow the administration to seek further review.