Oregon female athletes step down from medal podium next to trans competitor

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A couple of athletes for girls and the field did not stand on the medal platform, along with a sexual transformed athlete for high jumping in Oregon State Saturday night championship.
Fox News Digital shots showed Monday high school The elderly, Reese Ikard from Sherwood Secondary School and Alexa Anderson from Tigard Secondary School, descended from their positions on the podium next to a transient athlete representing Eda B. Wales Secondary.
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Eckard, in fourth place, Anderson, in third place, ended each of the gyms, which tied with fifth place. But females face the opposite direction, as other competitors received their medals from officials.
Then the shots showed the official young woman, and their gesture to move away. Then Eckard and Anderson were seen walking away from the platform and standing to the side.
Fox News Digital has contacted the Oregon School for Response Activities Association.
The athlete, the transit, competed in the boys category in 2023 and 2024, Fox News Digital I mentioned earlier.
ECKARD and Anderson have been praised for not standing on the platform on social media, and even its biography by the prominent conservative activist Riley Gaines.
Anderson said in a statement to Fox News Digital.
Girls and women who make symbolic gestures to protest against the inclusion of transportation in sport became an increasing trend in 2025.
On May 17 in the Massar Final in California and the field, Reese Hogan Crane Luther Secondary School rose from second place to the medal platform in the first place after Abi Hernandez stepped down. Hogan’s mission was praised on social media by jeans and others.
On April 2, footage of women’s fencing Stephanie Turner Rooting to protest a transient opponent in a competition in Maryland, after which it was punished for this, a viral went, ignited global awareness and scrutinized against the fence of the United States of America.
Oregon is one of the many democratic -controlled countries that have seen the transgender athletes compete in the path and field championships for girls this week, with other high -resolution incidents in California, Washington, Mine and Minnesota.
AFPI, a non -partisan research institute, presented a ninth title Discrimination complaint Against Oregon for its laws that allow biological males to compete in girls’ sports on May 27.
The complaint was submitted to the Civil Rights Office of the US Department of Education, which has already launched investigations into the ninth address against the sports league championships in secondary schools in Minnesota, Mine and Massachusetts.
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Rice Ecperte and Alexa Anderson do not stand in Oregon for girls, Rice Ecperte and Alexa Anderson on a medal platform next to a transient opponent. (America’s First Policy Institute)
“Every girl deserves a fair shot – in the field, on the podium, and in life,” said Jessica Hart Steinman, CEO of AFPI and deputy head of the litigation center in a statement.
“When the institutions of the state are forced to be aware of competition against biological males, they violate federal law and send a devastating message to mathematics throughout the country.”
president Donald Trump “Men from women’s sport” signed on February 5, and his administration made the fight against empowerment for converted athletes in girls’ sports by democratic states a priority.
The US Department of Justice has already filed a lawsuit against Mine State for challenging Trump’s executive order, and the President indicated on Tuesday that federal funding may come against California amid the situation involved in Hernandez.
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