Trump ends males in women's sport

It is common sense to have sex-based sporting divisions

President Donald Trump has signed the "No Men in Women's Sports" executive order, in front of female athletes, coaches, parents and advocates at the White House. He is a rare politician who kept an election promise to “get males the hell out of women’s sport.”

Trump signed the executive order on National Girls and Women in Sports Day, which celebrates female athletes in women’s sports and those who are committed to providing equal access to sports for all females.

"This doesn't have to be long. It's all about common sense," Trump said before signing the order, adding that "women's sports will be only for women."

Trump declared, "The war on women's sports is over."

Trump was joined in the East Room of the White House by Independent Women ambassadors Riley Gaines, Payton McNabb, Paula Scanlan, Sia Liilii, Lauren Miller, Kim Russell, Kaitlynn Wheeler, Linnea Saltz and Lily Mullens.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a briefing before Trump signed the executive order that it "upholds the promise of Title IX."

"President Trump pledged to restore common sense to our country and he’s continuing to deliver on that with an executive order that he will sign later today," she added. "The president will be signing an executive order, keeping men out of women’s sports to defend the safety of athletes, protect competitive integrity and "This common-sense action from President Trump ends the disgusting betrayal of women and girls by the previous administration, who for years catered to radical activists who wanted biological males to be treated as women in workplaces, showers, competitive sports, prisons and even rape shelters. Gender ideology insanity is over."

Watch President Trump deliver the facts here: 

Meanwhile in Australia, female athletes are threatened, gaslit and ghosted when they oppose the absurd policy of males in female sport. 

Males who wish they were women have full protection under the law and are not even allowed to be criticised or identified. 

Sex-based protections were removed from the Sex Discrimination Act by Julia Gillard in 2013. This has paved the way for males to dominate in women’s sport. 

I know first-hand the consequences of advocating for the common sense, evidence-based approach, rooted in science, that male and female sporting categories were developed and must be protected for the sake of fairness, safety and dignity. 

This week I am again in court, this time I have been accused of vilification for calling out males in female sport.