Trump Clashes With Maine’s Governor, Janet Mills, Over Trans Athletes
by https://www.nytimes.com/by/shawn-mccreesh · NY Times‘See You in Court’: Maine Governor Clashes With Trump Over Trans Rights
President Trump asked Gov. Janet Mills if her state would comply with the executive order he signed banning transgender athletes from women’s sports. He didn’t like her answer.
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CreditCredit...Tierney L. Cross for The New York Times
Shawn McCreesh is a White House correspondent. He reported from Washington.
Something happened at the White House Friday afternoon that almost never happens these days. Somebody defied President Trump. Right to his face.
He was about an hour into a meeting with a bipartisan group of governors when he suddenly remembered that the leaders of Maine had been resisting an executive order he signed banning transgender athletes from women’s sports.
“Is Maine here?” he wondered aloud. “The governor of Maine?”
“Yeah,” Gov. Janet Mills answered from across the room. “I’m here.”
Referring to the executive order, Mr. Trump asked, “Are you not going to comply with that?”
“I’m complying with the state and federal laws,” she said, rather pointedly.
Mr. Trump replied that “we are the federal law” and said that “you better do it” or else he would withhold funding from her state. He reminded her that public opinion was overwhelmingly on his side on this issue. (A poll from The New York Times and Ipsos last month found that just 18 percent of Americans believe transgender female athletes — those who were male at birth — should be allowed to compete in women’s sports.) He warned again: “You better comply, you better comply, because otherwise you’re not getting any federal funding.”
“See you in court,” she shot back.
“Good,” he said, sounding surly. “I’ll see you in court. I look forward to that. That should be a real easy one.” He paused and then added, “and enjoy your life after governor, because I don’t think you’ll be in elected politics.”
It was a fleeting back and forth, but Ms. Mills’s moment of defiance came at a time when Democrats have struggled to find any coherent or effective way to stand up to this president.
One month into his second term, Mr. Trump has called himself a king, with the White House posting a depiction of the president wearing a crown, and the Republican leaders of Congress have happily ceded their power to him.
The standoff between the administration and Maine’s leaders continued to escalate Friday. Shortly after Ms. Mills’s exchange with the president, the U.S. Department of Education sent a letter to the state’s education commissioner, Pender Makin, notifying her that it was initiating a “directed investigation” of Maine’s Education Department. The letter singled out one school in particular, citing reports that it had allowed “at least one male student to complete in girls’ categories.”
Hawaii’s Democratic governor, Josh Green, was at the meeting at the White House, too. “Several of the governors I talked to were a little bit distressed by that back and forth,” he said afterward, “because it seemed it was a little bit harsh — and it wasn’t yelling, but it was unnecessary conflict.”
It was just “a moment,” he added, “but she stood firm against him.”
Reid J. Epstein contributed reporting.
The Trump Administration’s First 100 Days
- Cuts to 9/11 Aid: The group led by Elon Musk made cuts to a federal program that administers aid to 9/11 responders, drawing bipartisan pushback. President Trump also floated the possibility that money culled from budget cuts could be returned to taxpayers, but he offered no details.
- ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’: Trump embraced a House G.O.P. budget and dismissed Senate Republicans’ plans, just hours after he gave conflicting directions to Congress on cuts to social safety net programs.
- Air Force One: Furious about delays in delivering two new jets, Trump has empowered Musk to explore drastic options to prod Boeing to move faster.
- Sued Over D.E.I.: Civil Rights groups claimed that Trump had exceeded his authority in issuing executive orders targeting diversity programs, and that they discriminated against Black and transgender people.
- Pentagon Cuts: Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told leaders to draw up plans to cut 8 percent from the budget over each of the next five years, officials said.
- Upending U.S.-Russia Policy: As peace talks opened in Saudi Arabia, President Trump made clear that the days of isolating Russia were over and suggested that Ukraine was to blame for being invaded, causing European leaders to recalibrate their relations with the U.S.