After years of legal battles, the Supreme Court on Tuesday (June 30) weighed in decisively, favoring the ability of states to protect women and girl athletes from unfair competition and safety risks. The 6–3 ruling comes after laws in two states, Idaho and West Virginia, were challenged for opposing biological males in female sports competitions.
The Supreme Court heard oral arguments for both cases in January, and Tuesday’s long-awaited ruling sparked widespread reaction across the country. Organizations like Alliance Defending Freedom, which represented defendants in both cases, applauded the “massive Supreme Court victory for women’s sports.”
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ADF President Kristen Waggoner said the court’s ruling represents a “victory for every girl who refused to stay quiet,” pointing to real-world cases where biological males dominated competitions, displaced hundreds of girls, and even raised safety issues in locker rooms.
“Men cannot be women, and no drug erases the male athletic advantage,” Waggoner asserted. “After today’s decision, the 27 states that have enacted laws protecting women’s sports can confidently enforce them. And the 23 states still on the sidelines have run out of excuses.”
While the ruling provides strong precedent supporting sex-based categories in sports, implementation details, enforcement mechanisms (such as verification processes), and remaining lawsuits in other states will need to play out, with LGBTQ activists vowing legal and cultural resistance.
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Supreme Court decision upholds states’ rights for women in sports-Baptist Press
EDITOR’S NOTE — This story was written by Sarah Holliday and originally published by Decision Magazine. Used with permission.





