
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Little v. Hecox | Oral Argument Date: 1/13/26 | Docket Link: Here
Oral Advocates:
Question Presented: Whether laws protecting women's sports by limiting participation to biological females violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
Overview: Consolidated cases challenging Idaho's categorical ban and West Virginia's Save Women's Sports Act generate Supreme Court's first major ruling on transgender athletics after Skrmetti reshaped constitutional sex discrimination analysis.
Posture: Multiple circuit splits; Little preliminarily enjoined (Ninth Circuit), West Virginia reversed (Fourth Circuit); proceedings stayed pending review.
Main Arguments:
• Petitioners (Idaho): (1) Constitutional "sex" means objective biological reality, not subjective gender identity; (2) Rational basis review applies to definitional challenges about meaning of "female"; (3) Skrmetti forecloses proxy discrimination claims targeting biology-based classifications
United States (as Amicus Curiae in Support of Petitioners): (1) Equal Protection permits sex-separated athletics based on constitutional history; (2) Biology-based classifications address competitive fairness, not discriminatory animus; (3) Skrmetti forecloses proxy discrimination claims
• Respondents (Hecox): (1) Categorical exclusions constitute traditional sex discrimination triggering heightened scrutiny; (2) Transgender status qualifies as quasi-suspect classification warranting judicial protection; (3) Individual assessment required under VMI rather than blanket exclusions
Implications:
The Fine Print:
• Fourteenth Amendment § 1: "No State shall...deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws"
• Idaho Code § 33-6203(3): "Athletic teams or sports designated for females, women, or girls shall not be open to students of the male sex"
Primary Cases:
• United States v. Skrmetti (2025): Constitutional sex classifications analyze biological differences rather than gender identity; laws addressing medical procedures and age restrictions don't trigger heightened scrutiny based on transgender status
• United States v. Virginia (VMI) (1996): Sex-based exclusions require exceedingly persuasive justification under intermediate scrutiny; categorical rules must account for individual capabilities rather than statistical generalizations
Link to Opinion: TBD.
Website Link to Opinion Summary: TBD.
Timestamps:
[00:00:00] Oral Argument Intro
[00:01:19] Oral Argument Begins
[00:01:26] Little Opening Statement
[00:03:27] Little Free for Questions
[00:19:05] Little Round Robin Questions
[00:42:18] United States as Amicus Curiae Opening Statement
[00:43:27] United States Free for All Questions
[00:52:38] United States Round Robin Questions
[01:08:33] Hecox Opening Statement
[01:10:40] Hecox Free for All Questions
[01:38:37] Hecox Round Robin Questions
[01:51:09] Little Rebuttal
By SCOTUS Oral Arguments4.7
1212 ratings
Little v. Hecox | Oral Argument Date: 1/13/26 | Docket Link: Here
Oral Advocates:
Question Presented: Whether laws protecting women's sports by limiting participation to biological females violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
Overview: Consolidated cases challenging Idaho's categorical ban and West Virginia's Save Women's Sports Act generate Supreme Court's first major ruling on transgender athletics after Skrmetti reshaped constitutional sex discrimination analysis.
Posture: Multiple circuit splits; Little preliminarily enjoined (Ninth Circuit), West Virginia reversed (Fourth Circuit); proceedings stayed pending review.
Main Arguments:
• Petitioners (Idaho): (1) Constitutional "sex" means objective biological reality, not subjective gender identity; (2) Rational basis review applies to definitional challenges about meaning of "female"; (3) Skrmetti forecloses proxy discrimination claims targeting biology-based classifications
United States (as Amicus Curiae in Support of Petitioners): (1) Equal Protection permits sex-separated athletics based on constitutional history; (2) Biology-based classifications address competitive fairness, not discriminatory animus; (3) Skrmetti forecloses proxy discrimination claims
• Respondents (Hecox): (1) Categorical exclusions constitute traditional sex discrimination triggering heightened scrutiny; (2) Transgender status qualifies as quasi-suspect classification warranting judicial protection; (3) Individual assessment required under VMI rather than blanket exclusions
Implications:
The Fine Print:
• Fourteenth Amendment § 1: "No State shall...deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws"
• Idaho Code § 33-6203(3): "Athletic teams or sports designated for females, women, or girls shall not be open to students of the male sex"
Primary Cases:
• United States v. Skrmetti (2025): Constitutional sex classifications analyze biological differences rather than gender identity; laws addressing medical procedures and age restrictions don't trigger heightened scrutiny based on transgender status
• United States v. Virginia (VMI) (1996): Sex-based exclusions require exceedingly persuasive justification under intermediate scrutiny; categorical rules must account for individual capabilities rather than statistical generalizations
Link to Opinion: TBD.
Website Link to Opinion Summary: TBD.
Timestamps:
[00:00:00] Oral Argument Intro
[00:01:19] Oral Argument Begins
[00:01:26] Little Opening Statement
[00:03:27] Little Free for Questions
[00:19:05] Little Round Robin Questions
[00:42:18] United States as Amicus Curiae Opening Statement
[00:43:27] United States Free for All Questions
[00:52:38] United States Round Robin Questions
[01:08:33] Hecox Opening Statement
[01:10:40] Hecox Free for All Questions
[01:38:37] Hecox Round Robin Questions
[01:51:09] Little Rebuttal

25,931 Listeners

3,557 Listeners

381 Listeners

1,106 Listeners

113,521 Listeners

2,391 Listeners

32,379 Listeners

7,264 Listeners

5,862 Listeners

3,940 Listeners

16,427 Listeners

399 Listeners

744 Listeners

6,317 Listeners

626 Listeners