A divided federal appeals court has handed down a split decision on President Trump’s common-sense military policy regarding transgender service, allowing the ban on new enlistments to remain in place while temporarily shielding current transgender troops from expulsion as a lawsuit continues.

In a 2-1 ruling, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals declared that while the War Department, led by Secretary Pete Hegseth, may enforce standards for enlistment that exclude those identifying as transgender, it cannot yet push out existing service members already in uniform.

The ruling effectively leaves the Trump administration’s enlistment ban in place, reaffirming that military readiness—not political activism—determines who qualifies to serve.

The court majority, led by Obama-appointed Circuit Judge Robert Wilkins, called the administration’s military policy “unlawfully motivated by the bare desire to harm a politically unpopular group.”

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That’s quite a stretch, considering the long-standing authority of the War Department to set the physical and mental standards needed to maintain America’s fighting force.

Wilkins admitted, however, that “it appears to us to be a much greater hardship to end a military career than to delay the start of one,” signaling that current transgender troops may remain pending resolution of the case.

Judge Justin Walker, appointed by President Trump, stepped in with a pointed dissent that hit at the core of the issue.

“Courts have neither the expertise nor the authority to decide whether the military can exclude the plaintiffs from its ranks,” he wrote, taking aim at the judicial micromanagement that has interfered with national security decisions for years. Walker’s blunt assessment reflected what countless Americans already believe: that the courtroom is not the place to run the U.S. military.

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Jennifer Levi of the left-wing group GLAD Law, representing the plaintiffs, praised the ruling as a win for transgender rights.

Levi claimed the decision “confirms that the Trump Administration has no legitimate basis to discharge transgender service members who have met every demanding standard.”

Of course, what Levi neglected to mention is that the military’s job is not to affirm identity politics—it’s to win wars, something Secretary Hegseth and the current War Department have made clear from day one.

The Pentagon, or as it’s properly called under the revived Department of War designation, did not immediately comment on the ruling.

But inside military circles, there’s little doubt that the leadership remains committed to restoring discipline and cohesion to America’s ranks after years of social experimentation.

The 2025 policy came in response to a January executive order from President Trump reiterating that adopting a transgender identity “conflicts with a soldier’s commitment to an honorable, truthful, and disciplined lifestyle.”

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Secretary Hegseth moved quickly to implement the directive, making clear that military service is a privilege rooted in performance, not in identity politics pushed by the cultural left.

Critics have predictably painted the policy as discriminatory, but the administration has framed it as a necessary return to readiness standards that prioritize combat effectiveness, morale, and cost efficiency. Years of gender-based experimentation had diverted focus and resources away from training and mission capability—something the War Department has worked hard to correct since Trump’s return to office.

Advocates for transgender troops argue that there may be as many as 15,000 transgender individuals serving among the 1.3 million active-duty personnel. However, internal War Department figures say that the number is likely far lower.

Even so, the administration’s policy isn’t about headcounts—it’s about ensuring the standards of America’s armed forces remain rooted in realism, not ideology.

The Supreme Court in May 2025 already allowed the policy to move forward amid litigation, lifting a temporary block from a federal judge in Washington State.

The high court offered no written reasoning, though Judge Wilkins speculated that it might have acted on a technical procedural matter.

Regardless, that earlier decision laid the groundwork for what the Trump administration views as a necessary reaffirmation of command authority.

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While left-leaning activists are cheering the partial block, the White House remains confident that the broader case will uphold the president’s constitutional authority to determine military eligibility standards.

The War Department under Secretary Hegseth continues to argue that national defense—not gender ideology—must drive policy decisions.

At the same time, conservatives view this ruling as yet another example of federal judges overstepping their bounds at the expense of common sense.

Military command decisions should be left to generals and warfighters, not judicial panels looking for political validation. There’s a simple truth driving this debate: America’s enemies don’t care about pronouns, and neither should its warriors.

For now, the ban on new transgender enlistments stands firm—a reflection of President Trump’s clear vision of a disciplined, mission-ready force.

Whether the courts finally respect that authority or continue down the path of social-engineered activism remains to be seen, but one thing is certain: the Trump administration and War Secretary Pete Hegseth are not backing down when it comes to restoring America’s military might.

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