Attorney General Chris Carr has urged the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) to restore all records, titles, and recognitions to female athletes who were wrongfully forced to compete with biological males.
The Attorney General has collaborated with 27 other Attorneys General with a letter sent to the NCAA, making these demands and criticizing them for complying with the Biden administration.
They wrote, “The policies that were created, promoted, and encouraged by the Biden administration and the NCAA not only enabled biological men to compete against women in sporting events across the country, but denied deserving women the recognition they had earned in events that you managed.”
The Attorneys General do recognize the efforts made by the NCAA to make up for their mistakes later in the letter, but they urge the organization to continue making amends.
They continue, “The NCAA should take this step for former athletes to preserve the integrity of Title IX and show your support for the women harmed by years of bad policy.”
The letter concludes with the Attorneys General citing the NCAA’s website as a point of reference for why female athletes should have their accolades restored. The website states, “Regardless of where they start, student-athletes strive to end each season at one of the NCAA’s 90 championships in 24 sports.”
AG Carr commented on this collaboration and emphasized the importance of returning to female athletes their rightful accolades. He also aimed at the Biden administration for enabling this kind of policy, calling it the result of an ‘unhealthy obsession.’
“The Biden administration’s unhealthy obsession with radical transgender politics nearly destroyed women’s sports,” Carr stated. “We fought back to protect female athletes across this country, and it’s past time that the NCAA recognized their achievements – not the victories stolen by biological males.”
Carr has a record of standing up for female athletes and did so numerous times during the Biden administration. Notably, he filed suit against the administration’s upending of Title IX and won, preventing females and males from having to share bathrooms.