NCAA prohibits transgender athletes in women's sports
The NCAA announced Thursday it would no longer allow transgender athletes to compete in women’s sports and would limit participation to those assigned female at birth.
The policy change, approved by the NCAA board of governors, comes one day after President Trump signed an executive order barring transgender athletes from competing in girls’ and women’s sports.
“We strongly believe that clear, consistent, and uniform eligibility standards would best serve today's student-athletes instead of a patchwork of conflicting state laws and court decisions,” NCAA President Charlie Baker, former Republican governor of Massachusetts, said in a statement Thursday.
“To that end, President Trump's order provides a clear, national standard," he added.
The NCAA policy change is effective immediately and applies universally in women’s sports, regardless of eligibility under the previous policy. Transgender athletes are still eligible to participate in the men’s category, under the updated policy.
Previously, the NCAA policy said transgender participation in each sport depended on guidelines set by the sport’s national or international governing body.
Transgender inclusion in women’s sports has become a political lightning rod, dividing the nation and playing an increasingly central role in political campaigns. Trump’s executive order this week fulfilled a long-standing campaign promise that rallied much of his base ahead of the election.
Baker told a Senate panel that there are fewer than 10 transgender athletes he is aware of who currently compete in college sports, accounting for less than 0.002 percent of NCAA athletes nationwide.
The NCAA includes 1,100 colleges and universities, accounting for more than 530,000 student-athletes, Baker said.
At least one NCAA official resigned following the announcement Thursday. Jack Turban said on social media that he was resigning from the NCAA Committee on Competitive Safeguards and Medical Aspects of Sports.
“Unfortunately, your recent decision to issue a blanket ban on trans female participation in women’s sports does not align with [medical] or scientific consensus,” Turban wrote in a letter to Baker. “I cannot in good conscience participate in this kind of politicization of science and medicine at the expense of some of our most vulnerable student-athletes.”
Turban told The Hill that he and other committee members were not given advance notice of the board's vote before the public announcement.
Trump praised the NCAA's decision in a Thursday post on X, writing, "Exciting news! Due to my Executive Order, which I signed yesterday, the NCAA has officially changed their policy of allowing men in Women's Sports - IT IS NOW BANNED. This is a great day for women and girls across the country."
He added, "Men should have NEVER been allowed to compete against women in the first place, but I am proud to be the President to SAVE Women's Sports. We expect the Olympics Committee to also use Common Sense, and implement this policy, which is very popular among the American People, and the entire World!"
Brooke Migdon contributed.
Updated at 6:09 p.m. EST.
Topics
-
Details on Trump executive order banning transgender athletes from women's sports
President Trump on Wednesday signed an executive order banning transgender athletes from participating in girls and women's sports. CBS News correspondent Natalie Brand has more on that and the ...CBS News - 12h -
Trump Signs Executive Order Barring Transgender Athletes From Women’s Sports
The president said schools that violated the order would jeopardize their federal funding.The New York Times - 21h -
Donald Trump signs executive order banning transgender athletes from competing in women's sports
The White House will likely expect sports bodies, such as the NCAA, to alter their rulesCBS Sports - 1d -
Trump bans trans athletes in women's sports
President Donald Trump signed an executive order Wednesday that bans transgender athletes who were assigned male at birth from participating in women's or girls' sports.ESPN - 1d -
Trump signs executive order banning trans athletes from women’s sports
Order to reinterpret anti-discrimination rules is latest move by Trump administration to roll back trans rights . Donald Trump signed an executive order on Wednesday banning transgender athletes ...The Guardian - 1d -
Trump signs order banning transgender women from female sports
He says the move, which covers non-elite levels, restores fairness but human rights advocates have condemned it.BBC News - 1d -
Trump to sign executive order banning transgender athletes from women’s sports
President Trump is expected to sign an executive order Wednesday banning transgender athletes from competing in girls’ and women’s sports, the latest in a string of executive actions from the new ...The Hill - 2d -
House passes bill to ban transgender student-athletes from women's sports
The House passed legislation that would ban transgender athletes from participating in women’s and girls’ sports at schools and institutions receiving federal funds.NBC News - Jan. 14
More from The Hill
-
DOJ appeals block of birthright citizenship executive order
The Justice Department has appealed a federal judge's order indefinitely blocking President Trump's executive order that would restrict birthright citizenship. In a short notice Thursday night, the ...The Hill - 41m -
Unions sue Trump administration over USAID shutdown
Unions representing government employees sued the Trump administration Thursday evening to block efforts to shut down the government’s independent foreign assistance agency. Elon Musk’s Department ...The Hill - 1h -
Senate installs Russell Vought as Trump’s next budget chief
Senate Republicans on Thursday confirmed Russell Vought, President Trump’s pick to lead the Office of Budget and Management (OMB), in the face of mounting Democratic attacks over his ties to ...The Hill - 1h -
EPA administrator, Trump special envoy join Los Angeles mayor to evaluate fire recovery
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lee Zeldin, President Trump's envoy for special missions Richard Grenell and other federal and state officials joined Los Angeles Mayor Karen ...The Hill - 1h -
DeepSeek in crosshairs
Welcome to The Hill's Technology newsletter {beacon} Technology Technology The Big Story Lawmakers take aim at DeepSeek A bipartisan pair of lawmakers are introducing a measure to ban Chinese ...The Hill - 1h
More in Politics
-
DOJ appeals block of birthright citizenship executive order
The Justice Department has appealed a federal judge's order indefinitely blocking President Trump's executive order that would restrict birthright citizenship. In a short notice Thursday night, the ...The Hill - 41m -
Unions sue Trump administration over USAID shutdown
Unions representing government employees sued the Trump administration Thursday evening to block efforts to shut down the government’s independent foreign assistance agency. Elon Musk’s Department ...The Hill - 1h -
Senate installs Russell Vought as Trump’s next budget chief
Senate Republicans on Thursday confirmed Russell Vought, President Trump’s pick to lead the Office of Budget and Management (OMB), in the face of mounting Democratic attacks over his ties to ...The Hill - 1h -
Senate Republicans confirm Project 2025 co-author as White House budget director
The Senate voted along party lines Thursday to confirm Russell Vought as the next head of the Office of Management and Budget despite fierce pushback from Democrats.NBC News - 1h -
EPA administrator, Trump special envoy join Los Angeles mayor to evaluate fire recovery
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lee Zeldin, President Trump's envoy for special missions Richard Grenell and other federal and state officials joined Los Angeles Mayor Karen ...The Hill - 1h