A federal judge in Kentucky on Thursday ruled the 2024 Title IX regulations were “arbitrary and capricious” and in violation of the
Ruling backs lawsuit objecting to biological men competing against women in collegiate and public school athletics.
On January 9, 2025, the Biden administration’s Title IX Final Rule was struck down by the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of
The Biden administration’s Title IX rules expanding protections for LGBTQ+ students have been struck down nationwide after a federal judge in Kentucky found they overstepped the president’s authority.
A federal court struck down the Department of Education’s guidance on Title IX on Thursday, and critics of the changes to the federal antidiscrimination statute celebrated the action as a
Republican attorneys general in Virginia, West Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky and Tennessee had argued the rule, first introduced last April and implemented in August, undermined Title IX’s ...
Education Secretary Miguel Cordona and the Education Department unlawfully imposed a new Title IX rule that violates the U.S. Constitution and exceeded their authority, a federal judge ruled Thursday.
Indiana, and Virginia. “Expanding the meaning of ‘on the basis of sex’ to include ‘gender identity’ turns Title IX on its head.” “For more than 50 years, Title IX has promised an ...
West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey, co-leader of a six-state coalition, declared victory Thursday in challenging the federal Department of Education’s overhaul of Title IX of the Educational Amendments Act,
WASHINGTON — The Biden administration’s Title IX rules expanding protections for ... to a lawsuit filed by Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio, Virginia and West Virginia.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration’s Title IX rules expanding protections ... to a lawsuit filed by Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio, Virginia and West Virginia.
A federal judge in Kentucky struck down changes made to Title IX by the Biden administration Thursday, ruling that the new regulations, which had sought to expand nondiscrimination protections for