Yahoo – AFP,
Thomas WATKINS, December 11, 2017
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| Protesters demonstrated in front of the US Army career center in Times Square, New York in July when the US moved to block transgender recruits (AFP Photo/ Jewel SAMAD) |
Washington
(AFP) - A US federal judge Monday denied a request from the Trump
administration to delay allowing transgender people to join the military,
clearing the way for them to sign up from January 1.
The move
will be seen as a blow to President Donald Trump, who in July sent out three tweets
saying that transgender troops could not serve "in any capacity,"
citing "tremendous" medical costs and disruption.
Those
messages, later followed by a formal White House memorandum, set off a roar of
protest -- with several service members and rights groups quick to sue. Already
two federal courts have ruled against Trump's proposed ban.
Under a new
policy originally announced last year by the Obama administration, the Pentagon
was first supposed to start accepting transgender recruits on July 1 this year,
but Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis pushed that back by six months to January 1
pending further review of the matter.
Then last
week, the Justice Department asked a federal court to further delay the January
date while the legal battle plays out.
But US
District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly ruled Monday that the government had not
shown it would be "irreparably harmed" if the military begins to
accept transgender individuals on January 1.
Government
lawyers cited Lernes Hebert, an acting deputy assistant secretary of defense,
as saying that meeting the January deadline would "impose extraordinary
burdens on the department and the military services" because "there
are considerable requirements associated with implementing this significant and
complex policy change."
Kollar-Kotelly
said she was not convinced.
In her
ruling, she wrote that the government had failed "to acknowledge the
considerable amount of time defendants have already had to prepare for the
implementation of this particular policy."
"Defendants
have had the opportunity to prepare for the accession of transgender
individuals into the military for nearly one and a half years," the judge
wrote.
'Planning
to prepare'
Pentagon
spokesman Major David Eastburn said the military was getting ready for the
January 1 deadline, in accordance with federal court rulings.
"DoD
is planning to prepare to assess transgender persons into the military
effective 1 January," Eastburn said.
The number
of transgender troops among America's 1.3 million active duty service members
is small, with estimates topping out at 15,000.
Trump's
July 26 tweets caught observers and many in the military off guard, coming with
little apparent coordination with the Pentagon.
The
president's policy shift meant that transgender troops who were encouraged to
come out under one administration suddenly faced getting booted under another
-- opening up a legal quagmire for the Pentagon.
Several
senior military officials voiced unease over the policy shift, and the head of
the Coast Guard soon said he would not "break faith" with transgender
personnel.
Trump has
said he did the Pentagon a "great favor" by banning transgender
troops, saying the issue had been "complicated" and
"confusing" for the military.
The move will be seen as a blow to President Donald Trump, who in July sent out three tweets saying that transgender troops could not serve "in any capacity," citing "tremendous" medical costs and disruption https://t.co/6ZSM49vV1Y— AFP news agency (@AFP) December 11, 2017

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