Critical Rights and Rule-of-Law Concern

Transgender Military Ban: Exclusion of Transgender Service Members via Tweet

Trump's tweet announcing the transgender military ban was not coordinated with military leadership. The Joint Chiefs issued an unusual public statement saying they would not change policy until they received 'formal guidance.' Multiple federal courts issued injunctions blocking the original ban. After losing court cases, the administration issued a modified 'Mattis plan' that imposed restrictions based on gender dysphoria treatment; it was implemented in 2019 and reversed by Biden in 2021. An estimated 14,700 transgender people were serving in the military.

Overview

The announcement was made in three tweets.

There was no press conference, no policy document, no consultation with military leadership. The Joint Chiefs of Staff — the highest-ranking military officers in the country — learned about the policy change from Trump's Twitter account.

Their response was unprecedented in modern U.S. civil-military relations: a public statement that they would continue treating all personnel "with dignity and respect" and would await formal guidance before making any changes — implicitly declining to implement the policy announced by their commander-in-chief until they received proper orders.

What the Evidence Showed

The RAND Corporation had studied the question at the Defense Department's request during the Obama administration. Its findings: the number of transgender service members likely to seek transition-related medical care was between 30 and 130 per year. The impact on military readiness would be "minimal." The costs would be "small."

Trump's tweets cited "tremendous medical costs and disruption." The RAND analysis found neither.

Four different federal district courts issued injunctions blocking the ban, each finding that the policy likely violated the equal protection guarantees of the Constitution by discriminating based on gender identity without adequate justification. The legal question was not whether the government could set reasonable fitness standards — it could — but whether a categorical exclusion of all transgender individuals was permissible.

The Supreme Court, on a procedural basis, stayed the lower court injunctions without ruling on the merits. The modified version of the policy was implemented. Biden reversed it five days into his presidency.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. Obama administration lifts transgender ban

    Defense Secretary Ash Carter announces the military will allow transgender individuals to serve openly, ending the previous exclusion policy. A one-year implementation period is established.

  2. Trump tweets ban — Joint Chiefs blindsided

    Trump announces in three tweets that transgender individuals will not be allowed to serve 'in any capacity.' The Joint Chiefs are reportedly not consulted in advance. They issue a statement indicating they will await formal guidance before changing any policies.

  3. Trump signs formal presidential memorandum

    Trump signs a formal presidential memorandum directing the military to return to pre-Obama transgender service policy, but gives Secretary Mattis authority to develop 'a study' with recommendations.

  4. Mattis plan submitted — modified ban

    Secretary Mattis submits a plan allowing transgender service members who are 'stable' (not in transition) to serve while barring those with gender dysphoria who require treatment. The plan is narrower than Trump's original tweet.

  5. Modified ban implemented after Supreme Court stay

    After the Supreme Court stays the lower court injunctions blocking the ban, the Mattis plan goes into effect. Transgender individuals with gender dysphoria who require transition are barred from new enlistment; current service members may be separated.

  6. Biden reverses ban on Day 5

    Biden signs an executive order on January 25, 2021, reversing the transgender military ban and reinstating the policy of open service for transgender individuals.

Sources

  1. Trump Says Transgender People Will Not Be Allowed in the Military — The New York Times
  2. Joint Chiefs: Will continue treating all service members 'with dignity and respect' — The Washington Post
  3. Federal courts block Trump transgender military ban — The Associated Press
  4. Assessing the Implications of Allowing Transgender Personnel to Serve Openly — RAND Corporation archived ✓

Verification

Publication provenance

Related records

Civil Rights
Critical Rights and Rule-of-Law Concern Ongoing

Second-Term Transgender Military Ban: Day-One Executive Order

The second-term ban was broader and more immediately disruptive than the first-term version. The 2025 executive order directed the Secretaries of Defense and Homeland Security to implement the policy …

Sources
3
Updated January 31, 2020 Civil Rights
War Crime / Crime Against Humanity

Travel Ban Expansions: From Muslim Ban to Permanent Entry Restrictions

The travel ban evolved through three executive orders as earlier versions were blocked by courts for discriminatory purpose and due process violations. The third version added non-Muslim-majority …

Sources
4