One of President-elect Donald Trump 's most popular talking points during his campaign centered on the future of transgender athletes.
Trump revisited the topic multiple times in the months and weeks before the election, suggesting at his rallies that one of the goals of his second term would be to ''keep men out of women's sports." Millions were spent on advertising that turned something that affects a tiny minority of competitors into a wedge issue.
More than half of voters overall — and the vast majority of Trump supporters — said support for transgender rights in government and society has gone too far, according to AP VoteCast, a survey of more than 120,000 voters nationwide.
What, exactly, Trump will do when he takes office on Jan. 20 is unclear. His transition team has not divulged any specifics, though the president-elect said during his campaign that the process would be ''easy.''
In some ways, it might be. In others, things could be far murkier.
What did Trump say during the campaign?
A lot. Trump seemed to identify the discussion around the rights of transgender people in general and trans athletes in particular as one that could garner both attention and support that went beyond his usual base.
Trump would often use language about gender identity that LGBTQ+ advocates say is wrong and harmful. He also falsely labeled two Olympic female boxers as men, and said their ability to participate in the Paris Games was ''demeaning to women'' even though both Imane Khelif of Algeria and Li Yu-ting of Taiwan were assigned female at birth and identify as women.