
South Carolina families received important news this week: Attorney General Alan Wilson announced that our state has officially withdrawn from its lawsuit challenging the Biden‑era reinterpretation of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. The reason is simple — the Trump Administration is now reversing the rule at the federal level, eliminating the need for continued litigation.
This marks a significant victory for parents, educators, and every South Carolinian who believes federal law should be applied faithfully, not reshaped to advance ideological agendas.
What the Biden Rule Tried to Do
Section 504 was written by Congress to protect students with actual disabilities from discrimination. It ensures that children with physical or cognitive impairments receive the support they need to learn and thrive.
The Biden Administration attempted to redefine gender dysphoria as a disability, effectively rewriting the law without congressional approval. This reinterpretation would have:
- Forced schools to adopt gender‑ideology mandates
- Required new policies on bathrooms, pronouns, sports, and overnight accommodations
- Positioned gender identity as a protected disability category
- Redirected resources away from students with genuine disabilities
Attorney General Wilson immediately challenged the rule, arguing that it stretched Section 504 far beyond its original purpose and imposed sweeping cultural changes on schools through regulatory fiat.
Why South Carolina Fought Back
South Carolina’s position was clear:
Federal agencies cannot twist long‑standing disability law to enforce gender ideology in classrooms.
The lawsuit defended:
- Parental rights in sensitive matters involving children
- Local control of school policies
- Teachers and administrators from federal overreach
- Students with disabilities, ensuring resources remain focused where Congress intended
This was not a symbolic fight. It was a stand for constitutional boundaries, common sense, and the rights of families to guide their children’s upbringing.
A Turning Point Under President Trump
With President Donald J. Trump back in office, his administration has begun dismantling the Biden‑era reinterpretation. Because the unlawful rule is being undone at the federal level, South Carolina’s legal challenge is no longer necessary.
Attorney General Wilson summarized the moment powerfully:
“We stood our ground, defended families, and won.”
This outcome reinforces a principle South Carolina Republicans have championed for years:
Washington cannot impose ideology on our schools by rewriting the law.
What This Victory Means for Our Communities
For families in Saluda County and across the state, this decision protects:
- The integrity of disability law, keeping it focused on real medical and developmental needs
- The authority of parents, not bureaucrats, to make decisions about their children
- The stability of our schools, preventing sudden federal mandates
- The rights of teachers and administrators, who should not be forced into ideological compliance
It also sends a clear message that South Carolina will continue to defend its values, its children, and its constitutional role in our federal system.
A Word of Gratitude
The Saluda County Republican Party joins Attorney General Wilson in thanking President Donald J. Trump for restoring lawful governance and reversing policies that threatened families and schools.
South Carolina stood firm.
Our leaders fought back.
And together — we won.
