Democrats celebrate as anti-trans provisions are removed from Health & Human Services funding bill

A series of anti-LGBTQ+ riders attached to several large spending bills in Congress were removed from the bill to fund the Departments of Education, Labor, and Health and Human Services, the latest draft of which was published yesterday. Democrats are claiming credit for having successfully worked to remove them.
The riders – which would have banned all federal funding from supporting gender-affirming care at any age, banned colleges and universities from letting trans people participate in sports or other activities, and banned K-12 schools from taking measures to support trans kids like letting them use the restroom of their gender – were attached to the $224 billion Fiscal Year 2026 Labor, HHS, Education and Related Agencies funding bill late last year.
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Independent journalist Erin Reed reports that the riders (or provisions in a funding bill unrelated to funding agencies) have been removed from the latest draft, which must be passed by January 30 to keep the government fully funded.
“The bills are strikingly clean,” Reed wrote. “Now, the package has been released—and for the moment, transgender people can breathe again.”
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Congressional Democrats are claiming credit for removing those provisions.
“Rep. McBride works closely with her colleagues every day to defend the rights of all her constituents, including LGBTQ people across Delaware,” a spokesperson for out Rep. Sarah McBride (D-DE) told Reed. “She was proud to work relentlessly with her colleagues in ensuring these funding bills did not include anti-LGBTQ provisions. It takes strong allies in leadership and on committees to rein in the worst excesses of this Republican trifecta, Rep. McBride remains grateful to Ranking Members [Rep. Rosa] DeLauro, [Sen. Patty] Murray, and Democratic leadership for prioritizing the removal of these harmful riders.”
“This latest funding package continues Congress’s forceful rejection of extreme cuts to federal programs proposed by [the president],” said House Appropriations Committee Ranking Member Rosa DeLauro (D-CT) in a statement. “Where the White House attempted to eliminate entire programs, we chose to increase their funding. Where the Administration proposed slashing resources, we chose to sustain funding at current levels.”
According to DeLauro’s summary of the bill, it will also increase funding for the Ryan White HIV/AIDS program and more than double funding for HHS’s minority HIV/AIDS Initiative.
Bills to fund the Departments of Homeland Security; Defense; Transportation, and Housing and Urban Development were also released yesterday. The bills altogether represent $1.2 trillion in federal funding.
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