HELENA, Mont. — A Montana law banning gender-affirming medical care for transgender minors will remain temporarily blocked, the state Supreme Court ruled Wednesday, after justices unanimously agreed with a lower court judge who found the law likely violates the state's constitutional right to privacy.
The case against the Montana law now goes to trial before District Court Judge Jason Marks in Missoula.
''I will never understand why my representatives are working to strip me of my rights and the rights of other transgender kids,'' Phoebe Cross, a 17-year-old transgender boy and lead plaintiff, said in a statement. ''Just living as a trans teenager is difficult enough, the last thing me and my peers need is to have our rights taken away.''
The attorney general's office said it looks forward to defending the law, with a spokesperson noting there are recent scientific and legal developments that fall in the state's favor. This comes as the British government on Wednesday indefinitely banned puberty blockers for children with gender dysphoria, citing an unacceptable safety risk.
''In upholding the district court's flawed decision to temporarily block a duly enacted law, the Supreme Court put the wellbeing of children -- who have yet to reach puberty -- at risk by allowing experimental treatments that could leave them to deal with serious and irreversible consequences for the rest of their lives to continue,'' spokesperson Chase Scheuer said.
The U.S. Supreme Court earlier this month heard arguments over Tennessee's ban on puberty blockers, hormones or surgery for transgender minors, with observers saying it appeared the justices were likely to uphold the ban. The Biden administration had sought to block similar bans that exist in more than half the states.
''Because Montana's constitutional protections are even stronger than their federal counterparts, transgender youth in Montana can sleep easier tonight knowing that they can continue to thrive for now, without this looming threat hanging over their heads,'' said Kell Olsen, an attorney for Lambda Legal.
Republican Sen. John Fuller, who sponsored the bill, said Wednesday's decision ''is an egregious example of the hyperpartisanship of the Montana Supreme Court." He criticized the courts for upholding the ''ability to sterilize and mutilate children'' and denying protection to children "from unscientific and experimental drugs and operations that have grown increasingly evident as a danger to children.''