The Trump administration is suing Smith College–one of the nation’s most elite women’s colleges–for admitting transgender women to its student body, a policy adopted in 2025. Trans women were male at birth,
My own college–also an elite women’s college–asked the student body in 2023 about whether to admit trans women. The final vote was not disclosed but it passed; students appeared to be strongly supportive of the change. When the New York Times wrote about the debate at Wellesley, my classmates and I had our own debate. Like the old fogies we are, we were uncomfortable that our stodgy, traditional alma mater was admitting men who transitioned to become female.
But when I visited the campus, I saw a different reality. The students really don’t care about gender identity. They welcome other students and close ranks around those who are vulnerable. Wellesley is a women’s college; the students welcome others who identify as female. It’s a non-issue.
But it’s not a non-issue to the Trump administration. At every opportunity, it tries to eliminate the very existence of trans people. And that’s why it is now taking legal action against Smith.
The Boston Globe wrote about the new offensive against Smith College:
NORTHAMPTON — For more than a decade, Smith College, one of the nation’s largest and most prestigious all-women schools, has admitted self-identified transgender women, with little public blowback.
But after the election of President Trump to a second term, Smith’s policy inevitably caught the attention of an administration consumed with eliminating any form of diversity practices in higher education. Late Monday, the federal government announced it had opened a civil rights investigation of Smith for its admission of transgender women.
Smith got on the administration’s radar via a conservative watchdog group in 2025, when the college awarded Admiral Rachel L. Levine, a transgender woman and former US assistant secretary for health under President Joe Biden, an honorary degree and invited her to be one of the speakers at the school’s commencement ceremony that May.
At the time, the news “piqued my interest as to what the policies were relative to single-sex admissions and gender identity at the college,” because Smith receives federal funding, said Sarah Parshall Perry, vice president of the conservative group, Defending Education.
In June 2025, Perry filed a federal civil rights complaint with the US Department of Education that has since morphed into a government investigation probing whether Smith’s admissions policy violates Title IX, the law prohibiting sex discrimination in education programs that receive federal assistance.
The investigation could have implications for other women’s colleges, including Mount Holyoke and Wellesley, which both admit transgender women.
“Title IX contains a single-sex exception that allows colleges to enroll all-male or all-female student bodies — but the exception applies on the basis of biological sex difference, not subjective gender identity,“ the US Education Department’s Civil Rights office said in a statement Monday.
“An all-girls college that enrolls male students professing a female identity would cease to qualify as single sex under Title IX,” the statement said.
A spokesperson for Smith said the school is aware of the investigation and “fully committed to [Smith’s] institutional mission and values, including compliance with civil rights laws,” but “does not comment on pending government investigations.”
Levine, the first openly transgender federal official to be confirmed by the Senate, is a favorite target of Republicans, drawing particularly intense criticism for her opposition to government-imposed restrictions on transgender care for minors, which she has called a health equity issue. The Trump campaign featured her image in ads attacking Kamala Harris on trans rights issues in the 2024 presidential race.
The Defending Education complaint argues Smith discriminates against “biological women” by admitting students whose assigned sex at birth was male but identify as female, while barring students whose assigned sex at birth was female but identify as male.
The US Department of Education did not respond to a Globe request for more information on Tuesday.
Perry, who served as a high-level official in the Department of Education during the first Trump term, said the investigation should encourage Smith to agree to a resolution with the administration.
“Smith College, obviously, is under no obligation to receive federal funding, but once they do, they have to follow federal civil rights law,” she said. “Smith can’t have its cake and eat it, too, by saying, ‘We’ll give lip service to Title IX, but we will violate the spirit, letter, history, and plain text of Title IX at the same [time].’ ”
If Smith wants to keep its current policies, she added, it can rely on private and state funding instead.
Shiwali Patel, senior director of education justice at the National Women’s Law Center, said the probe is proof the Trump administration is more interested in “focusing on fake problems than addressing the actual issues that women and girls are facing in education.” Patel also argued that admissions to private undergraduate colleges are exempt from Title IX’s requirements.
“The Department of Education’s investigation into Smith College is not civil rights enforcement. It’s the weaponization of Title IX and its protections,” she said.
Within hours of the Trump administration’s announcement of the investigation Monday, colorful chalk messages began to appear all over Smith’s campus: “You belong here,” “We love our trans sisters,” “Trans people belong at Smith.”
The college also alerted the campus community about the investigation via an email that shared mental health and other resources.
“We recognize that this development is very difficult for our community,” wrote Alexandra Keller, dean of the college and vice president for campus life.
Margot Audero, a transgender woman in her senior year at Smith, understands her college’s need to be cautious, but she also wants to hear its leaders speak up.
“This does fundamentally change the calculus,” she said. “Smith no longer has the option of staying out of the spotlight. . . . I do think they have the opportunity to loudly state their values.”
The Smith investigation is part of the White House’s broader campaign against transgender rights. On his first day back in office, Trump pledged to “defend women’s rights” by recognizing sex as immutable and binary — biologically male or female — and ordered federal agencies to “ensure grant funds do not promote gender ideology.”
The administration has since pursued a raft of antitrans policies, from blocking federal funding to hospitals that provide gender-affirming care to minors to mandating the removal of transgender personnel from the military. It even changed Levine’s name on her official portrait to her previous name, NPR reported.
The legal and political fight has resurfaced divisions over the difference between sex and gender, along with what it means to be a women’s college today. Both Smith and Wellesley have evolved significantly since first opening their doors around 150 years ago, while Mount Holyoke College, founded in 1837, is the most gender-inclusive of the trio.
Mount Holyoke dubs itself “the leading gender-diverse women’s college” and welcomes everyone but cisgender men (who identify as male, in accordance with their assigned sex at birth). Wellesley admits students who live and consistently identify as women.
Smith currently “considers for admission any applicants who self-identify as women,” including those who are cis, trans, and nonbinary, according to its website. The college changed its admissions policy to include self-identified transgender women in May 2015, amid pushback from some alumnae.
Genny Beemyn, director of the Stonewall Center at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, a resource for the LGBTQ+ community on campus and beyond, wasn’t surprised by the DOE investigation of Smith.
What is surprising is that “it took this long, quite honestly, given the [Trump] administration’s hatred of trans people,” Beemyn said.
As a nonbinary educator who often speaks publicly about transgender issues at schools across the country, Beemyn is receiving far fewer invitations as colleges keep a low profile to avoid the glare of the Trump administration.
Campuses are “scared to do trans events, to have trans speakers, to demonstrate that they support trans rights . . . because they’re so fearful of being targeted, being singled out, being attacked, maybe having federal funds taken away,” Beemyn said, adding that institutions should be careful, but not invisible in the fight.
Beemyn noted that they’ve also heard from transgender students at UMass Amherst and other schools “who are feeling like they don’t have a lot of support because their administrations are not coming forward and saying, ‘We support you.’ And that makes a difference.”
Last fall after Perry filed her complaint, Smith president Sarah Willie-LeBreton told the Globe she hadn’t heard from the DOE and wasn’t prepared to “offer legitimacy” to it by commenting. “Our admissions policies are firmly within the law,” she said at the time, “and we’re very proud of those policies.”
Now that a federal investigation of Smith has been announced, “The proof will be what Smith decides to do in response: if they capitulate, or if they stand up and say, ‘This is something we value, and we are not going to give into the administration,’ ” Beemyn said.

“It’s a non-issue.”
That’s exactly right: it’s a non-issue!
Live and let live. Worry about oneself, and be a strength for all others.
LikeLike
Exactly!
LikeLike
I recently saw part of a Robert Zapolsky (WHY DON’T ZEBRAS GET ULCERS) lecture where he was talking about some neuron that’s usually around twice as large in men as in women. The thing is, it almost always matches the gender people identify as, not what they were identified as at birth. So it appears that trans women really are women, even in terms of biology.
LikeLike
#GOP • #GenitalObsessionParty
LikeLike
Right now I’m far more concerned about the possibility of a global economic collapse stemming from a U.S. war with Iran. So, to borrow from George S. Kaufman: even if you could somehow place the Mt. Wilson telescope inside the Mt. Palomar telescope, Mr. Trump, you still wouldn’t be able to detect my level of concern about trans women attending all-women’s colleges.
LikeLiked by 1 person
If I remember correctly, during my daughter’s time at Wellesley, there was a student who transitioned from female to male. That person was allowed to remain at the college and finish their degree; it was a topic of campus-wide discussion to inform policy.
The attack on Smith is another attempt to banish trans people from society in general. When you can’t find a place to pee out in the world, you must self-efface into invisible.
LikeLike
“It’s a non-issue.” That’s only because any woman at Smith who dissents from transgender mania would be ostracized, threatened, and very likely physically attacked. That’s the state of almost all college campuses today: follow the party line or suffer the consequences – exactly what Diane Ravitch supports.
You also fear the consequences of any dissent on this issue. On this blog a while back a commenter asked you if you thought it was unfair to XX-chromosomed athletes (women) to force them to compete with XY athletes (men) because of the physical advantages that post-puberty males have: strength, foot speed, greater lung capacity, etc. You said – your exact words – that believing there are any meaningful sex-based advantages was a “rush to judgment.” You published this absurd statement, even when there was/is a mountain of scientific evidence that such advantages exist, along with common sense and everyday life that corroborate the science.
These days you don’t have any dissenting thought that you’ll express publicly for fear of being shunned by the crackpot Left.
LikeLike
Typical name-calling and response by “the Right.” I find your certainty repugnant.
LikeLike
Please supply the full quote that you cited.
I’m not stupid. I know that men have physical advantages over women that matter in some sports, but not all sports.
That’s why there are men’s teams and women’s teams.
Do males have a physical advantage in table tennis? I don’t know.
Do males have a physical advantage in chess? I doubt it.
Do males have a physical advantage in figure skating? I don’t think so. Women seem to be more agile on the ice than men, although men skaters can pick up female skaters.
I think it’s pretty mean to use every opportunity to erase trans people. They are a tiny minority–1%. They are easy targets. But they do exist. You don’t have to like them. But you could just leave them alone.
LikeLike
I quote the “rush to judgment” phrase from memory. Three words, a very commonly used phrase, easy to remember. You wrote it and you know that you wrote it.
I favor being courteous to everyone, and I have much compassion for the very small percentage of people who are truly transgender. Younger friends are dealing with that issue now with their son. But transgenderism became a craze, in sociologists’ terms, a social contagion. Teenage girls in particular fell under the spell in ridiculous numbers. Fortunately, the hysteria has subsided, and medical practitioners are facing what will likely be an avalanche of personal injury lawsuits for carving up emotionally vulnerable young people.
If men have physical advantages in some sports, should transgender women (i.e. XY- chromosomed people) not be allowed in those competitions? It may be a small number of transgender women involved, but that’s no justification for unfair competition for the other XX women. Be careful: if you agree with the large majority of Americans on this issue, you will be ostracized, even cancelled.
LikeLike
Yes, exactly. A non-issue.
I came to understand this several years ago when a teeny piece of me was concerned about the argument regarding trans athletes in terms of level fields of competition. As the parent of an “elite” swimmer, who has struggled for decades to attain their current status, I was worried about fairness and I wondered what they might feel. When I asked, the response received was so genuinely, deeply ambivalent about my concern on *their* behalf I could not help but hear. Kid’s response was: ‘my competition is with _myself_, to do better than last time. It’s not with the person the next lane over; I do not care about their performance. Their personality and happiness and community spirit perhaps. But their performance is nothing to do with me. Or my own.’
I heard how authentically and fully felt was this attitude and it humbled me.
As a person who seeks iteratively to improve society and relations and activities within it, sometimes it’s hard to see or appreciate the change we strive for, or have achieved; to recognize it when we see it. Our kids have been raised to a different, more community-centered world order. They are right, our neighbor’s sense of self does not impact our own. Period.
It is a non issue.
LikeLike
All I know is what I have lived…I watched Amy transition to Andy. The school warned me to call them by the name they wanted. I was so afraid I would blow it, so I called Andy, Professor Hernandez. Not a stretch from what I always did. I mean I projected success onto my students when I found out what they wanted to do in life, e.g., Officer Gutierrez, Nurse Gomez, and whatnot. Before long, I forgot and Andy and I had a great student-teacher relationship. We even talked about what he was going through, although, more about his Native American ancestry. I also watched/witnessed/heard about the young person who felt he was in the wrong body (I had many of these students) and then ended up committing suicide. Kids would ask me to explain, but I only knew what I knew and used my words more in an empathetic way. I read as much as I could about the subject and I had tears in my heart. I don’t claim to know much of anything on the rules and regulations of these colleges, but like Diane said, “Let people have peace. And don’t assume that all people who transition want to play sports.” That’s my three cents worth.
LikeLike
I have a daughter who is old enough for me to worry about her. I worry a lot more about her receiving harsh treatment from a magaite than I do from a transgender person. To be entirely honest, I don’t understand what transgender means. On the other hand, I know exactly what grift means, and our present administration is trying to make us look at transgender people instead of it insatiable lust for turning government into its own Kash Kow.
LikeLiked by 2 people