News from the South - Tennessee News Feed
Trump order barring passport gender marker changes leaves transgender Tennesseans without IDs
by Anita Wadhwani, Tennessee Lookout
May 1, 2025
For more than a year, state LGBTQ advocates spearheaded a campaign that helped hundreds of transgender individuals obtain U.S. passports that reflect their gender identity and physical appearance after Tennessee ended gender updates for state drivers’ licenses.
But an executive order issued on President Donald Trump’s first day in office — declaring U.S. policy is to “recognize two sexes, male and female” — ended the ability of transgender people to get passports that reflect their gender. A federal court temporarily blocked the order last month, but a final legal outcome has yet to be decided.
In Tennessee, where state officials in 2023 denied trans people the right to make gender changes on driver’s licenses, Trump’s executive order has jeopardized the only available form of government-issued ID available that accurately reflects the gender of transgender and nonbinary Tennesseans.
“Tennessee has the least amount of access to change gender markers,” said Molly Quinn, executive director of OUTMemphis. “A lot of transgender people here used passports as their primary gender marker.”
Trump’s order, she said, has created anxiety and uncertainty. On the day the president issued it, Quinn’s organization fielded 27 calls from individuals anxious to learn whether they could still begin the passport application process, she said.
Tennessee has long prevented trans people from amending their gender designation on birth certificates, the only state in the nation to explicitly do so.
The 1977 law was upheld last year by the United States Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit Court, which found “there is no fundamental right to a birth certificate recording gender identity instead of biological sex.”
Tennessee has the least amount of access to change gender markers. A lot of transgender people here used passports as their primary gender marker.
– Molly Quinn, OUTMemphis
Gender, however, could be amended on Tennessee drivers’ licenses until Republican-backed legislation in 2023 defined “sex” in Tennessee law as “a person’s immutable biological sex as determined by anatomy and genetics existing at time of birth.” Evidence of biological sex, the law said, is listed on a birth certificate.
The Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security then posted notice of new rules that it would not accept requests for gender marker changes that were inconsistent with an individuals’ birth certificate. A legal challenge to the department’s rules, filed last year by the ACLU of Tennessee in Davidson County Chancery Court, remains ongoing.
Immediately following the drivers license notice, OUTMemphis, ACLU of Tennessee and other advocacy organizations made a statewide push to help individuals secure U.S. passports.
Between the passage of the 2023 Tennessee legislation and Trump’s inauguration, the groups assisted more than 200 people in obtaining a U.S. passport to reflect their gender identity and physical presentation, Quinn said.
Government issued documents that reflect accurate gender identity and appearance can be critically important, Quinn noted.
Interactions with police or Transportation Safety Agency officers at security checkpoints examining IDs that appear at odds with an individual’s physical appearance may subject individuals to interrogation, allegations of fraud or criminal behavior and harassment. IDs are also checked by employers, financial institutions and election officials.
Christian Mays, community center coordinator for OUTMemphis, said all his official identity documents identify him as female. Mays, a transgender man, said he was pulled over once by police who accused him of impersonating someone else, because he presented as a man but his ID listed him as a woman.
Mays recently got his name legally changed. He submitted his passport application to include his male gender identity the day before Trump’s executive order. His chief concern at the time was the ability to apply for a part time job at a pizza restaurant, which would require an ID.
He said he is now uncertain whether a passport reflecting his gender identity will come through.
“I was thinking it was finally my time,” Mays said.
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Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Tennessee Lookout maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Holly McCall for questions: info@tennesseelookout.com.
The post Trump order barring passport gender marker changes leaves transgender Tennesseans without IDs appeared first on tennesseelookout.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Left
The content primarily discusses the challenges faced by transgender individuals in Tennessee regarding gender marker changes on official documents, especially U.S. passports, due to both state and federal policies. The article provides perspectives from LGBTQ advocates and individuals affected by these policies. While it presents these views with empathy and highlights the difficulties transgender individuals face, particularly in light of Trump’s executive order, it does not advocate for a specific political stance but instead reports on the situation and its impacts. The language used emphasizes the struggles for recognition of gender identity, which leans towards progressive advocacy, though it does not overtly push for a partisan position. The mention of legislative actions by Republicans and their framing positions the article within a broader political debate, subtly suggesting a critique of conservative policies, typical of a center-left perspective.
News from the South - Tennessee News Feed
Building housing fireworks goes up in flames after electric box fire
SUMMARY: A building housing fireworks in White Haven caught fire due to an electrical box overheating, causing an accidental blaze. Firefighters from Memphis responded overnight, battling flames with fireworks igniting inside the structure. A charred and overheated electrical meter was identified as the fire’s origin. Video footage showed intense flames and smoke alongside sporadic fireworks going off. Though the building suffered total loss, firefighters remained on scene to extinguish hot spots and prevent reignition. Authorities confirmed the owner was storing fireworks inside, which fueled the fire’s intensity and hazards faced by emergency crews during containment efforts.
Fireworks lit up the night sky while a building burned after a spark ignited in a building’s electrical box. READ MORE: https://www.fox13memphis.com/news/whitehaven-building-housing-fireworks-goes-up-in-flames-mfd-says/article_5778dbe5-2ca1-43c1-b007-e8571c1d9959.html
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News from the South - Tennessee News Feed
Tennessee bill would ban masks for law enforcement following ICE roundups
SUMMARY: A Tennessee bill proposed by Rep. Justin Jones aims to ban law enforcement from wearing masks and requires visible identification on uniforms. The “Stop American Gestapo Act” responds to concerns about masked, plain-clothed federal agents, especially ICE, making arrests that fuel fear and confusion in immigrant communities. Advocates highlight risks of impersonation, harassment, and threats to public safety. Opposing bills by Republicans like Sen. Marsha Blackburn seek to protect agents’ anonymity to safeguard their families. Jones argues law enforcement should not operate anonymously and hopes for bipartisan support to prioritize safety over politics. The session resumes next January.
The post Tennessee bill would ban masks for law enforcement following ICE roundups appeared first on www.wkrn.com
News from the South - Tennessee News Feed
Father living in U.S. for over 20 years detained by ICE outside Bartlett home
SUMMARY: Edgar Perez says his father, Hernando Granado, a hard-working migrant in the U.S. for 23 years, was detained by ICE outside their Bartlett home without a warrant. Granado, who came from Mexico seeking the American dream as a construction worker, has no criminal record, but ICE targeted him possibly after he submitted a G325 form to immigration authorities. Perez shared that the arrest, captured on a ring camera, felt like a harsh shock, as his father was treated like a criminal despite never having been jailed. Granado will be transferred to a detention center in Louisiana, and Perez vows to fight for his return.
A father who’s lived in the U.S. for more than 20 years was detained by ICE at his home. READ MORE: https://www.fox13memphis.com/news/father-living-in-u-s-for-over-20-years-detained-by-ice-outside-bartlett-home/article_b05cb0a8-f1a8-4be8-984f-fe5df55b9b9a.html
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