Interfaith Alliance, a national leader in defending religious freedom and multi-faith democracy, is proud to be among the very strong contingent of faith-based organizations rallying today in front of the Supreme Court in defense of trans rights, as the court hears oral arguments in the case of US v Skrmetti.
The case focuses on a Tennessee law that would affect access to transition-related care nationwide for both minors and adults for decades to come. If Tennessee’s law is upheld by the high court, the case could provide a precedent for states to bar puberty blockers, hormone therapy and surgery for trans minors - a devastating blow to the right of trans kids and their families to make their own decisions about care.
“Standing outside the Supreme Court today, I was inspired and energized to see so many different faith leaders and communities speaking out clearly in support of trans rights, and against efforts to cynically use a narrow religious worldview as an excuse to suppress those rights,” said Guthrie Graves-Fitzsimmons, Senior Director of Policy and Advocacy at Interfaith Alliance. “In the face of the immoral targeting of trans youth for political gain by religious extremists, we loudly expressed our love for our trans neighbors. God loves trans youth.
“The government should not insert itself into medical decisions best handled by families and their doctors,” Graves-Fitzsimmons added. “Interfaith Alliance and our partners are proud to mobilize Americans of diverse faiths and beliefs who know that true religious freedom goes hand-in-hand with the freedom of all people to control their own lives, bodies, and best interests.”
Tennessee’s discriminatory law is part of the Christian nationalist agenda, which uses government coercion to strip away the rights of LGBTQ+ Americans. It seeks to enforce a narrow religious worldview and belief onto all Americans, and to help erase the LGBTQ+ community from public life. Whatever the Supreme Court’s decision in US v Skrmetti, Interfaith Alliance will continue to advance a vision of our country where religion is used to uplift people rather than to suppress their rights and crush their individuality and diversity.

Interfaith Alliance is a leading advocate for multi-faith democracy and healthy boundaries between religion and government. It was among the founding organizations of a national sign-on letter, joined by more than 1,800 nonprofit organizations, voicing opposition to the proposed settlement agreement in National Religious Broadcasters v. Bessent, a case in which the Trump administration and a coalition of religious broadcasters sought to create an effective exemption to the Johnson Amendment, the 70-year-old law that bars 501(c)(3) organizations, including houses of worship, from endorsing or opposing political candidates. Had the settlement been approved, religious leaders would have been able to make partisan endorsements from the pulpit without risking their tax-exempt status. Today, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas dismissed the case, finding it lacked jurisdiction.

Interfaith Alliance is a leading advocate for multi-faith democracy and healthy boundaries between religion and government. It joined a friend-of-the-court brief from religious organizations in Chiles v. Salazar, in support of Colorado’s right to protect LGBTQ+ youth from harmful, discredited “conversion therapy” practices.

Interfaith Alliance, a leading advocate for religious freedom and multi-faith democracy. will host the National Interfaith Town Hall: Building Momentum from No Kings on Tuesday, March 31, 2026, from 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. ET.