Pentagon Panel to Consider Trump's Transgender Ban

Experts to weigh fate of transgender service members currently serving
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Aug 30, 2017 12:33 AM CDT
Pentagon to Weigh Fate of Existing Transgender Troops
Nick Rondoletto, left, and Doug Thorogood, protest against a proposed ban of transgender service members.   (AP Photo/Olga R. Rodriguez)

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis is assembling a panel of experts to discuss the matter of openly transgender individuals already serving in the US military, the AP reports. President Trump last Friday directed the Pentagon to extend indefinitely a ban on transgender individuals joining the military, but he gave Mattis the authority to decide on those already serving. Mattis says in a statement released Tuesday that the Pentagon, in consultation with the Department of Homeland Security, will develop a plan to "promote military readiness, lethality, and unit cohesion." He adds that panel members "will bring mature experience, most notably in combat and deployed operations, and seasoned judgment to this task."

More than 140 House Democrats have sent a letter to Trump calling on him to reconsider his ban, adds the AP. The lawmakers argued there is no place for discrimination in the military or anywhere else in society. In the letter released Tuesday, they said enforcing the ban could mean discharging active duty soldiers, sailors, Marines, and Air Force members who are serving honorably. The White House had said Friday that transgender people would be allowed to continue serving until Mattis had completed his analysis. (More transgender stories.)

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