Biden admin favorably cites Justice Gorsuch time and again in hopes that ‘blunderbuss approach’ to blocking sex discrimination rule will fail at Supreme Court

Left: Associate Justice of the Supreme Court Neil Gorsuch (Erin Schaff-Pool/Getty Images). Right: FILE – Protesters of Kentucky Senate Bill SB150, known as the Transgender Health Bill, cheer on speakers during a rally on the lawn of the Kentucky Capitol in Frankfort, Ky., March 29, 2023 (AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley, File).

The Biden administration filed an emergency petition with the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday in which it asked the justices to temporarily block two lower court orders that prohibit the federal government from enforcing its new rule against sex discrimination. In its filing, the government leaned hard on the words of Justice Neil Gorsuch in two recent cases — one that supported a reading of sex discrimination to include transgender status and the other that rejected the entire idea of nationwide injunctions.

In its petition, the administration urged the justices to at least allow portions of the law — such as those meant to protect pregnant and lactating students — to stay in place while challenges to the portions involving gender identity proceed.

The underlying cases were filed in Louisiana, where that state was joined by the Mississippi, Montana, and Idaho as plaintiffs, and Kentucky, where that state along with Tennessee, Ohio, Indiana, Virginia, and West Virginia are plaintiffs. The lawsuits challenged a 2024 rule implementing Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 following Supreme Court’s 2020 decision in Bostock v. Clayton County, a landmark 6-3 ruling in which Gorsuch said civil rights protections for “sex” extend to sexual orientation and transgender status.

In Bostock, Gorsuch wrote that it is “clear” that “[a]n employer who fires an individual for being homosexual or transgender fires that person for traits or actions it would not have questioned in members of a different sex,” which is, “exactly what Title VII forbids.”

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