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BILL โ€ข US SENATE

S 1957

No Place for LGBTQ+ Hate Act

119th Congress
Introduced by Tammy Baldwin, Michael Bennet, Richard Blumenthal and 16 other co-sponsors

The No Place for LGBTQ+ Hate Act would nullify five executive orders and block federal funding used to restrict LGBTQI+ rights regarding healthcare, military service and education.

Introduced in Senate
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Bill Summary ยท S 1957

Bill Summary: No Place for LGBTQ+ Hate Act (S. 1957)

Overview

The No Place for LGBTQ+ Hate Act is a legislative proposal introduced in the 119th Congress designed to nullify several specific Executive Orders (EOs) that restrict the rights, protections, and healthcare access of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and intersex (LGBTQI+) individuals. The bill seeks to remove the legal authority of these orders and prohibit the use of federal funding to execute them.

Key Provisions

Repeal of Executive Orders

The core of the bill is the immediate nullification of five specific Executive Orders and any successor orders that "similarly harm or limit" the rights of LGBTQI+ individuals. The targeted orders include:

  • Interpretation of Sex (EO 14168): Aims to reverse mandates regarding the federal interpretation of sex that the bill asserts lead to discrimination in employment, education, housing, and healthcare, as well as the denial of appropriate identity markers.
  • Military Service (EO 14183): Seeks to overturn the reinstatement and expansion of the ban on transgender individuals serving in the military.
  • Adolescent Healthcare (EO 14187): Nullifies the directive preventing the provision of transgender-related healthcare to individuals under the age of 19.
  • School Athletics (EO 14201): Removes the prohibition against transgender female students participating on sports teams that align with their gender identity.
  • Educational Curriculum (EO 14190): Repeals the requirement for schools to "deny the existence of transgender people."

Financial Restrictions

To ensure these orders cannot be implemented despite their legal status, the bill explicitly invokes the Spending Clause of the U.S. Constitution. It prohibits the use of any federal funds to implement, administer, enforce, or carry out the specified Executive Orders.

Savings Provision

The bill includes a standard legal safeguard stating that nothing within the Act is intended to impair the overall constitutional authority granted to the President of the United States.

Affected Parties

  • LGBTQI+ Individuals: This bill would restore protections in healthcare, education, and employment, and remove barriers to military service.
  • Federal Agencies: Agencies currently tasked with enforcing these Executive Orders would be legally and financially barred from doing so.
  • Educational Institutions: Schools would no longer be mandated to restrict transgender students from sports or omit transgender-related topics from their environment.
  • Healthcare Providers: Medical professionals would no longer face federal restrictions regarding the provision of gender-affirming care to adolescents under 19.

Procedural Status

  • Introduced: June 4, 2025
  • Current Status: Read twice and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.

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