At a White House meeting with Trump, he picked a fight with Janet Mills, the governor of Maine. He asked if she was present, then berated her because Maine allows transgender women to compete in women’s sports. Governor Mills stood up for Maine’s laws and didn’t back down. Trump threatened to cut off all federal funding to Maine. Mills said, in a direct challenge to Trump, “we will see you in court.”
Republicans used to be the party that believed in local control and in diminishing federal control over state and local decisions. No more. Trump is obsessed with the transgender issue. He signed an executive order banning their participation in women’s sports. In other orders, he has tried to erase any civil rights for transgender men or women, any access to medical care for them, and to define them out of existence.
I am not sure where I stand on the question of whether transgender women should participate in women’s sports; after all, biologically, men are typically stronger and faster than women. I am not sure it is fair to have biological men and women competing in races that require physical strength.
But of this I am sure: transgender men and women should be allowed to live their lives without harassment by government. Their decisions are theirs alone. They should get the medical care they seek from qualified professionals. They should use whichever bathroom they want. People don’t become transgender so they can go to a different bathroom. Women’s bathrooms all have closed stalls. Are men worried that a transgender man might see them pointing their penises at a urinal? Really?
Government should butt out of people’s personal decisions. Government should stay out of our bedrooms and out of our doctor’s offices. The decisions we make about our lives that don’t hurt anyone else should not be controlled by government. As Governor Tim Walz memorably said, “Mind your own damn business.”
President Trump had a testy exchange with Maine Governor Janet Mills on Friday over his threat to withhold federal funding from the state unless it bans transgender athletes from competing in women’s and girls’ sports.
“You better do it, because you’re not going to get any federal funding,” Trump told the Maine Democrat at a White House event.
Mills told Trump the state’s policy is “complying with state and federal laws” and hinted at a potential legal battle over Trump’s order.
“We’re going to follow the law, sir,” she said.
“We’ll see you in court,” she added.
“Good, I’ll see you in court. I look forward to that — that should be a real easy one,” Trump said. “Enjoy your life after governor because I don’t think you’ll be in elected politics.”
The confrontation came a day after Trump told a group of governors that he “heard men are still playing in Maine” and threatened to withhold funding under the terms of an executive order he signed earlier this month.
“So we’re not going to give them any federal funding. None, whatsoever, until they clean that up,” Trump said Thursday at the Republican Governor’s Association meeting in Washington, D.C.
The executive order barred transgender girls and women from participating in female sports, reinforcing a key Republican stance in the 2024 campaign. The order grants federal agencies broad authority to enforce Title IX according to the Trump administration’s interpretation, which defines sex as a person’s gender at birth.
Several lawsuits have been filed against Trump’s transgender policies, with more challenges expected.
The Maine Principals’ Association allows transgender student athletes to choose between competing on a team based on their sex at birth or one that matches their gender identity. Despite Trump’s order, the group said it will continue to allow transgender female athletes to compete.
Mills, who was elected in 2019, said in a statement that Maine “will not be intimidated” by Trump’s threats, adding the state will “take all appropriate and necessary legal action.”
“If the president attempts to unilaterally deprive Maine schoolchildren of the benefit of federal funding, my administration and the attorney general will take all appropriate and necessary legal action to restore that funding and the academic opportunity it provides,” Mills said.

This is a non-issue. In December 2024, NCAA President Baker told a Senate committee that fewer than 10 transgender athletes compete in the NCAA. Why isn’t this reported on? Let these transgender people live their lives in peace, safely and able to choose their own roads. Ridiculous, disappointing, devastating that Trump has manipulated the conversation so egregiously….and that so many of his followers WANT to believe the worst.
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Brigid,
I agree with you. Trump has created an issue where none existed before. He would rather talk about the “danger” of transgender kids than climate change, or his abandonment of Ukraine, or his turning over the government to Musk, or the danger of his Cabinet members.
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I personally think women’s sports should be restricted to biological women. But this doesn’t need to be federalized, or even decided by policy set at the state level. Let leagues and districts make these decisions and handle any edge cases as they arise, which for most leagues and districts will almost never happen.
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FLERP, I agree with you about who should decide. The issue of who should participate in sports is not one that should be decided by Congress or even state legislatures. That’s what so troublesome to me. Every sport has a governing body. Let them decide. Every district and school board can decide. There are sports and games like chess that do not depend on physical strength. There are boys who “transitioned” before puberty. Trump has used this issue obsessively to stir hatred. Meanwhile, these kids are bullied, some have been murdered. Leave them alone.
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I used to coach girls basketball. In the interest of truth, I was an assistant, and not a good one. So this transgender thing got my attention. I have long felt that women’s sports are a fantastic way of looking at athletes in subgroups, which allow young people to compete and gain the joy of physical activity that was so important to me.
One thing I noticed when I coached was that good teams always seemed to have one superstar who shared many body characteristics with males. They had more muscle mass, they matured and had adult muscles at an early age. Sometimes I felt like it was just not fair for our girls to have to compete with them. It was sort of like playing Shaq: that just ain’t fair.
I do not know whether transgender sports figures have an advantage. Doctors and sports organizations need to solve this without politicians making points with the grievance crowd for their own good. What I do know is that we need to be good to each other. If that is not abundantly clear now to everyone, they must be living in a different reality from me.
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The governor of Maine can be elected for two consecutive four year terms. Maine doesn’t have term limits, which means after two four year consecutive terms, they have to take four years off before running again.
Governor Janet Mills is 77. This is her second term as governor, which means she can’t run in 2026. By 2030, she’ll be 83. I think she’ll be retired from running for public offices by then, but she may still be active in the Democratic Party.
FELON47, once again, is showing off his ignorance making it sound like he has the power to end her political career.
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I didn’t think of this until I posted my previous comment.
FELON47’s track record for winning court battles while president
“Trump loses 93% of his cases in court.” | Democracy Forward
74 lawsuits filed Against Trump to stop his executive actions | News Nation
https://www.axios.com/2025/02/20/trump-legal-challenges-courts
74 Lawsuits Have Been Filed to Stop Trump, Most in a Handful of Courts | Bloomberg
https://www.yahoo.com/news/74-lawsuits-filed-stop-trump-131302243.html
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