海角大神

In first big case of the term, Supreme Court tackles free speech and LGBTQ rights

A protester waves a pride flag as LGBTQ+ activists gather outside the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, Dec. 5, 2022. On Oct. 7, 2025, justices heard the first of three cases in the new term involving questions of LGBTQ+ rights.

Kevin Lamarque/Reuters/File

October 7, 2025

Since 2020, the U.S. Supreme Court has adjudicated two landmark cases involving transgender-related rights. Its new term includes several more. These closely watched cases could have seismic ramifications 鈥 especially if the court addresses whether transgender individuals deserve civil rights protections as a class.

First on the docket, the nine justices heard oral arguments on Tuesday about whether Colorado can ban a therapist from practicing 鈥渃onversion therapy鈥 on LGBTQ+ minors. Chiles v. Salazar, brought by a plaintiff who is a therapist and a 海角大神, revolves around free speech.

Later this term, the court will also mull a pair of cases involving states banning transgender athletes from participating in girls sports. Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J. involve questions about the 14th Amendment鈥檚 equal protection clause and the boundary lines of Title IX.

Why We Wrote This

In its new term, the Supreme Court will hear several cases on LGBTQ+ rights, including on transgender athletes and conversion therapy for minors. At stake are questions about free speech, fairness, and how the Constitution addresses modern questions the Founders did not anticipate.

The cases center around very different constitutional questions. But they鈥檙e coming before the Supreme Court at a time when the country is embroiled in a culture war over the rights of transgender people. It is yet another in a series of constitutional tests over how a document ratified in 1788 addresses modern issues the Founding Fathers couldn鈥檛 have anticipated.

Free speech vs. medical care for minors

In Chiles v. Salazar, one side argues that the case is all about free speech. The other says it鈥檚 about the right of states to regulate medical care. Which question the justices find more persuasive might determine the outcome.

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Colorado, like more than half of states and the District of Columbia, has banned or placed limits on licensed counselors from 鈥渆ngaging in conversion therapy鈥 with those under 18. The practice is defined as attempting to change someone鈥檚 gender identity or sexual orientation.

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis signs legislation banning conversion therapy that seeks to change the sexual orientation or gender identity of minors, in Denver on May 31, 2019. The Supreme Court on Tuesday heard arguments in whether the ban violated the free speech of a therapist.
Jim Anderson/AP/File

Kaley Chiles, a licensed counselor and practicing 海角大神, sued the Centennial State in 2022. 听engages in talk therapy with individuals who are uncomfortable with their sexual orientation or are experiencing gender dysphoria. Her clients are often fellow 海角大神s, who seek her instead of enlisting a secular therapist. Ms. Chiles has repeatedly declined in interviews with news outlets to say whether she wishes to offer her clients conversion therapy.

鈥淚 want to be able to speak genuinely, openly, have full conversations with my clients,鈥 Ms. Chiles , 鈥渨ithout the state kind of peering into my office in these completely private conversations.鈥

The primary legal question at play in Chiles v. Salazar is a 鈥渄octrinal question of free speech law,鈥 says Rick Garnett, who heads the Program on Church, State, and Society at University of Notre Dame鈥檚 law school in Indiana. 鈥淣amely, 鈥榃hat鈥檚 the distinction between regulations of conduct and regulations of expression?鈥欌 The court, he says, has a deep well of case law to draw upon in making its ruling.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit upheld the Colorado law, ruling that the ban did not violate freedom of religion or speech. The Supreme Court did not take up the freedom of religion question. It is only examining the free speech question.

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A majority of justices appeared sympathetic to Ms. Chiles鈥 argument on Tuesday. 鈥淛ust because they are engaged in conduct doesn鈥檛 mean their words aren鈥檛 protected,鈥 Chief Justice John Roberts said.

Several leading medical groups, including the 听and the , have condemned conversion therapy as ineffective and inhumane. Multiple have found a heightened risk of depression and suicide among those who undergo it.During oral arguments, James Campbell, a lawyer for Ms. Chiles, disputed the evidence that conversion therapy is harmful, saying that the studies don鈥檛 prove causation and were flawed because of biased sampling.

Some religious groups argue that the ban constitutes viewpoint discrimination 鈥 against counselors who seek to change their clients鈥 gender identities or sexual orientations, and patients who wish to undergo that process. On Tuesday, that appeared to be a persuasive argument for a court whose justices hold free speech as sacrosanct.

鈥淔or a lot of religious liberty activists, and a lot of religious counselors, they see this law as imposing a particular burden on their ability to engage in counseling that is consistent with their religious beliefs,鈥 Professor Garnett says. This court is very protective of free speech, he adds. 鈥淢ost of the justices are on the record as being very skeptical about what we call 鈥榲iewpoint-based regulations of speech.鈥欌澨齀n this case, the viewpoint being discriminated against would be 海角大神 therapists who believe that children diagnosed with gender dysphoria need therapy to resolve their feelings of conflict, not gender transition treatment.

Going in to Tuesday鈥檚 hearing, Justices Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett were seen as pivotal votes. Neither appeared convinced by Colorado鈥檚 arguments, with Justice Gorsuch at one point saying, 鈥淚鈥檓 asking you about the logic of your argument.鈥

On the other hand, LGBTQ+ activists say Colorado and other states are within their rights to ban or otherwise regulate conversion therapy, given the medical consensus that the practice is both harmful and ineffective. The law does not apply to faith-based ministries or life coaches, Colorado Solicitor General Shannon Stevenson said.

But after Ms. Stevenson said that a therapist would violate the state鈥檚 statute by engaging in a therapy for the purpose of changing a minor鈥檚 sexual orientation or gender identity, a member of the liberal wing of the court appeared skeptical听of arguments听that Ms. Chiles could not show enough harm to bring the case before the high court.

鈥淭hat settles the standing question,鈥 said Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

Legal scholars on the left have argued that this is not truly a free speech case, because Colorado law does not prohibit 海角大神s and others, including Ms. Chiles, to debate the merits of conversion therapy 鈥 just not while on the clock treating minors.

鈥淢ost medical treatments involve some form of speech,鈥 says Josh Rovenger, legal director at GLAD Law, which advocates equal rights for LGBTQ+ Americans.

鈥淓xtending the First Amendment into medical treatments that violate the standards of care鈥 is fundamentally changing the 鈥渨ell-trodden鈥 authority states have to regulate medical practices, says Mr. Rovenger, who advised the Biden administration on issues of equity.

The court鈥檚 June ruling in United States v. Skrmetti, in which the court held that states have the right to ban gender transition treatment for transgender minors, could end up tipping the court toward Colorado in this case, Mr. Rovenger says, since the June ruling emphasized a principle that states have the authority to regulate medical care.

鈥漈he overwhelming consensus is that these treatments don鈥檛 work, and that鈥檚 why they鈥檙e being prohibited,鈥 says Laurie Marhoefer, who studies LGBTQ+ history at the University of Washington.

If the court says that the therapist鈥檚 practice qualifies as speech protected under the First Amendment, then Colorado has to show a compelling government interest that is narrowly tailored.

鈥淭he compelling government interest would be avoiding harming minors with this type of therapy,鈥 says Timothy Holbrook, a law professor at Denver University鈥檚 Sturm College of Law.

Title IX and transgender athletes

In November, the justices will be refereeing a pair of cases related to sports.

The legislatures of Idaho and West Virginia passed acts stipulating that men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 sports should be classified according to biological sex determined at birth. Those respective laws have been challenged by transgender athletes in West Virginia v. B.P.J. and Little v. Hecox. (The plaintiff in the latter has asked the Supreme Court to dismiss the legal challenge because she has decided to withdraw from athletic competition; Idaho has requested that the case continue.) The two sides offer competing interpretations of Title IX, which prohibits schools that receive federal funding from discriminating 鈥渙n the basis of sex.鈥

President Donald Trump signs an executive order at the White House in Washington, Feb. 5, 2025, barring transgender female athletes from competing in women's or girls' sporting events. The Supreme Court is taking up a pair of cases looking at the constitutionality of such bans in November.
Alex Brandon/AP

The tussle is over fairness. Advocates on the side of Little and West Virginia argue that those born biologically male have a strength advantage, particularly after puberty, and as a result, transgender women should be precluded from competing with biological women. They say it鈥檚 a matter of protecting women鈥檚 sports as part of Title IX.

The challengers, on the contrary, say that it鈥檚 unfair discrimination to ban someone who identifies as a girl from competing in the female category of sports. They argue that the bans constitute the very kind of discrimination Title IX seeks to prevent. And that it violates the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment. The cases both relate to female competitions, which have been more contentious than the issue of transgender boys participating in male sports.

鈥淭hough the case is about transgender athlete bans, it is possible, if not likely, that the Supreme Court will issue broader pronouncements about the scope of Title IX and the equal protection clause,鈥 says Carrie Evans Wilson, a partner at Montgomery McCracken Walker & Rhoads, a law firm whose specialties include Title IX cases. 鈥淲hatever the holding of the court is, it will be applicable to many other areas that affect the rights of LGBTQIA+ students.鈥

, she says: The decision could shape policies over gender-identity bathroom and locker room access for transgender individuals. It could impact future Title IX regulations regarding discrimination against LGBTQ+ athletes. It might even challenge policies in educational institutions such as preferred pronouns and name use.

Will the court name transgender Americans a protected class?

One legal question is whether, in keeping with the 14th Amendment鈥檚 equal protection clause, individuals who identify as transgender are protected from discrimination on the basis of sex.

Similar questions about equal protection came up in 2020, when the court extended federal anti-discrimination protections to LGBTQ+ workers in Bostock v. Clayton County. The 6-3 majority ruled that employers cannot fire an individual on the basis of their sexual orientation or gender identity. The decision, written by Justice Gorsuch, stated that 鈥渋t is impossible to discriminate against a person for being homosexual or transgender without discriminating against that individual based on sex.鈥

Gerald Bostock, who was at the heart of the landmark Supreme Court case Bostock v. Clayton County, poses outside his home in Atlanta, Sept. 9, 2019. In that case, the court ruled that people could not be fired from their job because of their sexual orientation or gender identity.
Lawrence Hurley/Reuters/File

That decision came as a surprise to many court watchers, as both Justice Gorsuch and Chief Justice Roberts voted with the court鈥檚 liberal wing.

It was a landmark decision. Though the majority opinion referred to employment practices, other courts believed it had a wider application. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit cited Bostock in a Title IX case that same year. In Grimm v. Gloucester County School Board, the appeals court said that schools cannot bar transgender individuals from using restrooms that correspond to their gender identity.

Court watchers wonder whether the justices will have to address Bostock in its new rulings. During its previous term, the court punted on an opportunity to do so. When the court upheld a state ban that blocked gender-transition treatment in Skrmetti, Justice Gorsuch wrote, 鈥淭he Court declines to address whether Bostock鈥檚 reasoning reaches beyond the Title VII context.鈥

One issue in Skrmetti was whether transgender individuals as a group ought to be entitled to a higher level of constitutional protection under the equal protections clause. In other words, are transgender individuals a protected class? Justice Barrett expressed skepticism on that point.

Historically, the court evaluated several considerations as to whether a group ought to be entitled to heightened protection, says Scott Skinner-Thompson, a professor who focuses on LGBTQ+ issues at the University of Colorado Boulder's law school.

鈥淭he key factors are: whether it鈥檚 an immutable characteristic, whether [there鈥檚 a] history of discrimination, and whether they鈥檙e politically powerless,鈥 says Mr. Skinner-Thompson.