- Prince Harry settles lawsuit against Murdoch's UK tabloids
- Stock markets diverge tracking Trump plans
- Sudan 'political' banknote switch causes cash crunch
- Masa Son, Trump's Japanese buddy with the Midas Touch
- Borussia Dortmund sack coach Nuri Sahin after Champions League setback
- 'Love for humanity': Low-crime Japan's unpaid parole officers
- Brazil saw 79% jump in area burned by fires in 2024: monitor
- No home, no insurance: The double hit from Los Angeles fires
- ZeroPath Corp. Launches Next-Generation Code Security Platform Powered by Artificial Intelligence
- Rare snow socks New Orleans as Arctic blast chills much of US
- Trump's birthright citizenship move challenges US identity: analysts
- German opposition leader Merz urges united EU stance on Trump
- Canada vows strong response, Mexico urges calm in face of Trump threats
- Trump's climate retreat will have 'significant impact' on COP30: Brazil
- Beckham, protests, crypto's new dawn: what happened at Davos Tuesday
- Pharrell kicks off Paris Fashion week with Louvre show
- Dutch researchers employ unique e-bike to make cycling safer
- Blast kills one person at Barcelona port
- France's arch film provocateur Blier dies at 85
- Stocks diverge, dollar rallies as Trump gets to work
- Syrians return to homes devastated by war
- Pharrell pursues Paris landmark takeovers with Louvre show
- EV sales slip in Europe in 2024 in overall stable car market
- 'Too hard': Vietnam's factory workers return to country life
- Trump 2.0 boosts interest in Davos: World Economic Forum chief
- Asian markets swing as Trump revives tariff fears on taking office
- Brazil drought lights a fire under global coffee prices
- The global forces sending coffee prices skyward
- Trump leaves Paris climate agreement, doubles down on fossil fuels
- Trump decrees end of diversity programs, LGBTQ protections
- Prince Harry's battle against Murdoch UK tabloids goes to trial
- Trump vows to plant flag on Mars, omits mention of Moon return
- Trump vows to 'tariff and tax' other countries
- Trump vows to 'tariff and tax' on other countries
- Trump seeks to rename Denali, highest peak in N. America
- Trump vows trade policy of 'tariff and tax' on other countries
- Trump says to declare national emergency, use military at Mexico border
- Trump to end diversity programs, define two genders: official
- Job cuts report worries employees at Germany's Commerzbank
- X and Facebook toughen EU pledge to combat hate speech
- 'Y.M.C.A.' journeys from gay anthem to Trump theme tune
- French mother on trial accused of starving teen daughter to death
- Bitcoin hits record above $109,000 awaiting Trump
- Markets extend global rally as Trump-Xi talks boost sentiment
- Marcos denounces 'woke' sex education bill in Catholic Philippines
- India's 'digital arrest' scammers stealing savings
- Trade wars, culture wars, and anti-immigration: Trump's big promises
- Djokovic condemns 'violence' against protesters in Serbia
- 'Mufasa' claws its way back atop N.America box office
- Mexican authorities to seal secret tunnel on US border
Trump to end diversity programs, define two genders: official
US President Donald Trump will issue a series of executive orders targeting diversity programs and gender identity policies Monday, moving swiftly to deliver on divisive campaign promises to dismantle "woke" culture.
On the campaign trail Trump railed against diversity, equity and inclusion policies in the federal government and in the corporate world, saying they discriminated against white people -- men in particular.
He also demonized any recognition of gender diversity, attacking transgender people -- particularly transgender women in sports and gender-affirming care for children.
An incoming White House official told reporters ahead of the presidential inauguration Trump will order the US government to recognize only two biological sexes as well as to end federal diversity programs.
The policies will almost certainly face legal challenges.
In practical terms, official documents would going forward be forced to "reflect sex accurately," the official said, without stating whether that meant gender assigned at birth.
"No longer will the federal government be promoting gender ideology," the official said.
The government would also only recognize two genders -- male and female -- ending official policies that recognized a third gender, denoted by an "X" on US passports for example.
"What we're doing today is defining that it is the policy of the United States to recognize two sexes: male and female," the official said.
The official did not specify any clear policies on gender transitions -- but did suggest that genders assigned at birth could not be changed.
"These are sexes that are not changeable, and they are grounded in fundamental and incontrovertible reality," they said.
The government would also immediately move to curtail programs that sought to redress historical inequality but that Trump has insisted disadvantage white people, particularly men.
"The Department of Treasury -- this is a little while ago now -- included diversity training that said all white people, regardless of how woke they are, contribute to racism. So this type of funding, we're going to end at these (diversity) programs. We're going to end that," the official said.
They added that the incoming administration would move to "terminate all discriminatory programs" while also seeking out civil service roles linked to promoting diversity, equity and inclusion that had been renamed by the Biden administration in an effort to protect them from Trump's axe.
"This includes environmental justice programs, equity related grants, equity action plans, equity initiatives, these types of things," the Trump official said.
- Transgender fear -
Ahead of the election, Trump planned to "ask Congress to pass a bill establishing that the only genders recognized by the US government are male and female, and they are assigned at birth," his political program stated.
He had also promised to ban gender-affirming care for minors and to take legal action against any doctors and educators who carry out or enable the practice.
Many in the queer community were alarmed by the election of Trump following a campaign in which the Republican put attacks on trans people and their rights front and center.
The LGBT National Help Center has been receiving about 2,000 calls per day since the election results, instead of the usual 300, according to its director Aaron Almanza.
Anti-trans rhetoric was a mainstay of Trump's campaign rallies, drawing huge cheers from crowds fired up by the Republican's false claims that children were being forced to undergo gender reassignment, among other claims.
P.Gonzales--CPN