Trump’s view of transgender athletes echoes among some candidates who are running for President MOO
Whether they would allow transgender athletes to compete in women’s sports already a key discussion among Olympic leaders before US President Donald Trump signed an executive order that puts pressure on them before the Summer Games 2028 in Los Angeles.
In a speech before signing a document on Wednesday, Trump said that he wanted the International Olympic Committee to change all “connections with this absolutely funny theme”.
Going President Moo Thomas Bach, who had a tense meeting with Trump during his first term in the White House, avoided a strong attitude on the topic, but many of the seven candidates who nominated him to have replaced him this year.
Sebastian Coe, who leads the world’s athletics, seems to be a global body that manages the paths and the terrain, supports Trump’s position on his X account.
“The preservation of competition integrity in the women’s category is a fundamental principle of athletics sports and how we know that it all starts in schools,” said Coe, a double Olympic 1,500 meter champion from Britain. “Establishing clear, unambiguous policies is a critical first step.”
Currently, IOC only advises the control bodies of sports that make the final decisions on eligibility. IOC allowed transgender athletes to participate in the Olympic Games since 2004, but only in 2021 he competed his first open transgender athletes.
IOC elections to replace Bach, whose 12-year border reached and left in June, March 20 at a meeting in Greece. Some of the candidates clearly let them know where they are on the participation of transgender persons.
“We developed clearly at World Athletics, consulting politics about women’s eligibility,” Coe wrote in his manifesto focused on MOO voters. “I advocate for clear, scientifically based policies that protect the female category.”
Another leading candidate for the replacement of Bach, Juan Antonio Samaranch Jr., also called on IOC to set clear guidelines on the issue.
“IOC has a fundamental duty to protect female sports by accepting a policy for maintaining unambiguous differences between male and female categories,” Samaranch wrote in December.
‘Frames in the informed science’ over ideology
In his electoral manifesto, the head of the Ski Federation, Johan Eliasch, said that he wanted IOC to set rules “guided by the biological fact, not cultural trends.”
“Regardless of the current testosterone level, exposure to puberty creates sexual differences in height, weight and so on, which can provide a sports advantage,” Eliasch said, referring to “scientifically informed frames” compared to ideology.
The International Cycling Association followed the transgender policy of Aquatica and athletics in July 2023, although its President David Lappartient was more cautious in his Olympic Manifesto. He suggested that Moc should be guided by Olympic sports bodies with common principles, while “we must accept that the answer can vary from one sport to another.”
The only woman among seven candidates for IOC, a double Olympic Olympic Olympic Medal, Kirsty Coventry, did not directly deal with her native problem in her manifesto, writing instead of “strengthening women’s sports protecting the athletes.”
But in an interview with the BBC two weeks ago, she said it was MOO -A’s duty to provide equal opportunities and honesty.
Tested last week at an event that led the IOC for candidates, the Coventry-Sports Minister Zimbabwe said: “We will learn lessons along the way, and we will strengthen ourselves and get better rules and regulations.”
Two other candidates – Prince Feisal Al Hussein of Jordan and President of the Federation of Gymnastics Morinari Watanabe – did not address transgender athletes in their documents, although Prince Feisal emphasized gender equality and equality.
Next leader Moo -a has to work with Trump
The next MOO leader will need a functional employment with Trump’s administration ahead of the Los Angeles Olympic Games.
Trump said that he had sent a secretary for Homeland Security Kristi Noem “to deny any and all visible applications submitted by men trying to falsely enter the United States while identifying themselves as athletes.”
Bach, leaving President MOO, said on Thursday that he was not familiar with Trump’s comments the night before.
“I’m not aware of these comments. Let’s see,” Bach said in Milan at an event to mark one year until the Olympic Olympic Games in 2026.
Later on Thursday, IOC responded to a request for comment on the matter, saying: “Working with the appropriate international sports federations, IOC will continue to explain and discuss various topics with relevant authorities.”