A highly charged vote in the House of Representatives on Wednesday set off another political firestorm over transgender medical care for minors, revealing deep divisions across party lines and within them.
According to Fox News, lawmakers approved a bill that would make transgender medical treatment for anyone under 18 a federal crime — a sweeping measure that instantly drew intense criticism from Democrats and civil liberties advocates.
The final tally was 216 to 211. While the partisan split was clear, there were notable crossovers.
Three Democrats — Reps. Vicente Gonzales of Texas, Don Davis of North Carolina, and Henry Cuellar of Texas — joined Republicans in support.
Four GOP lawmakers — Reps. Mike Kennedy of Utah, Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania, Gabe Evans of Colorado, and Mike Lawler of New York — voted no.
The legislation imposes steep criminal penalties. Doctors who perform transgender-affirming surgeries on minors could face up to 10 years in prison. Prescribing puberty blockers to patients under 18 would also be a crime. And parents who consent to or help facilitate these treatments could be prosecuted as well.
The result was a lopsided pushback from Democrats, who overwhelmingly rejected the bill. The majority argued that the language goes far beyond previous legislative efforts on the issue — crossing into territory they see as criminalizing parental decisions and medical practice.
Mike Zamore, National Director of Policy & Government Affairs at the ACLU, condemned the measure.
“This extreme bill puts the threat of prosecution between hundreds of thousands of families and their doctors and would put doctors behind bars for exercising their best medical judgment,” Zamore said in a statement. “Passing this bill would be a grave escalation of an already severe effort to not only push transgender people out of public life but also allow the state to control our bodies and our lives further.”
Republican supporters countered that the bill is necessary to protect children.
Rep. Nancy Mace of South Carolina delivered one of the most forceful arguments in favor, accusing Democrats of defending what she described as harmful treatment practices.
“It is obscene. It is disgusting. You’re seeing in real time Democrats wanting and defending grooming of children. And it is abhorrent,” Mace said.
She continued, “There is a lie at the heart of the debate we’re having today that I have to correct — no child is born in the wrong body. There are only two sexes, male and female. There are no others.”
The measure now heads to the Senate, where its future remains unclear. Republicans hold the majority there, but whether Senate leadership will bring the bill forward — and whether votes exist to advance it — is still uncertain.













