- The Texas Supreme Court reversed an injunction that barred the state from conducting investigations into the use of gender-affirming care for transgender children.
- Still, the court found that Gov. Greg Abbott did not have the authority to order the investigations.
- Abbott ordered state’s family services agency to conduct investigations in Feburary.
The Texas Supreme Court on Friday reversed an injunction that barred the state from conducting investigations into the use of gender-affirming care for transgender children as child abuse — even as it found that Texas Gov. Greg Abbott didn’t have the authority to order the investigations in the first place.
The court found that neither Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton nor Gov. Greg Abbott could direct the state’s Department of Family and Protective Services to conduct investigations into gender-transitioning procedures.
However, the judges still allowed the investigations to move forward by throwing out a lower court ruling.
In Feburary, Abbott, a Republican, ordered state’s family services agency to conduct investigations into reports of minors receiving gender-affirming medical care.
The move came after after Paxton, also a Republican, issued a formal opinion stating that providing gender-affirming medical treatments like puberty blockers and gender-reassignment surgery to youth is “child abuse” under state law.
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