Trump proposes new rules to ban gender-affirming care for transgender youth

A number of new regulations have been proposed by President Donald Trump’s administration to stop transgender children under the age of 18 from receiving gender-affirming care in American hospitals.

One of the proposed rules, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), would prevent hospitals and clinics from utilizing its programs if they opted to continue providing gender-affirming care on Thursday.

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Federal Medicaid funds could not participate in gender-affirming procedures under a second rule.

Both Medicare and Medicaid are government-provided health insurance plans that are available to vulnerable populations. Medicare provides coverage for older Americans and those with disabilities, whereas Medicaid primarily provides for low-income households.

The Trump administration stated in a statement that the majority of healthcare providers collaborate with Medicare and Medicaid to provide their patients with health insurance. Therefore, the proposed rule would effectively outlaw gender-affirming care.

The CMS statement reads, “Nearly all US hospitals are Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries.”

The US government will not engage in business with organizations that intentionally or unintentionally harm children, according to the statement.

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. also signed a declaration rejecting gender-affirmation therapy as harmful to youth on Thursday in addition to the two proposed rules.

The Food and Drug Administration also sent notices to 12 manufacturers of chest binders, warning that marketing to transgender youth would be deemed against the current administration, in accordance with his orders.

dissention with the general medical opinion

Despite repeated warnings from leading medical organizations that prohibiting such treatment could have severe, lifelong consequences, the Trump administration’s latest broadside against transgender healthcare was marked by the string of pronouncements.

However, Kennedy, who has no formal medical training, attacked some of the nation’s top medical organizations on Thursday, accusing them of breaking their professional standards.

According to Kennedy, “the American Medical Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics spread the false impression that chemical and surgical sex-rejecting procedures may be beneficial for children with gender dysphoria.”

They broke their Hippocratic Oath, but they did no harm. Young people who are prone to ‘gender-affirming care’ have suffered long-lasting physical and psychological harm. Not a prescription, this. It is error.

Mehmet Oz, the director of the CMS, also accused healthcare providers of discrediting patients by prescribing gender-affirming medications. He suggested that the patient’s motivation was more likely to be profit than patient health.

The doctor can’t look them in the eyes and treat them like a lost, confused child in need of assistance. They provide a chance. They eventually turn into victims, Oz said.

Even though it makes sense, “reasonable, evidence-based objections that a child’s confusion might resolve over time have been ignored.”

The transgender community is being targeted by the Trump administration, who denies that such a person even exists.

Instead, Trump announced in an executive order that only the concept of biological sex, not gender identity, and that people would be classified as either male or female, based on their birth certificates, as soon as they entered office on January 20.

Transgender identity was also deemed a “false” concept by the executive order.

“Problem that doesn’t actually exist”

Eight days later, on January 28, Trump issued a second executive order urging the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to end practices he described as “the chemical and surgical mutilation of children.”

The proposed rule and declarations to limit gender-affirming care were based on that order, which was cited on Thursday.

However, there is a general consensus within the healthcare industry regarding the benefits of gender-affirming care, including reducing suicide, anxiety, self-harm, and depression.

Gender-affirming care can take a variety of forms, including surgery and puberty blockers, which are regarded as safe and reversible for children who want to stop puberty from kicking in.

Surgery is incredibly uncommon among transgender youth, and such treatments are only suggested after thorough consultation with a reputable medical professional.

According to a study conducted by Harvard University in 2024, an average of 2.1 teenagers, between the ages of 15 and 17, sought gender-affirming surgery, according to medical insurance claims from 2019.

No cases were reported under the age of 12 and that average dropped to 0.1 for teenagers between 13 and 14 years old.

Dannie Dai, one of the study’s authors, stated in a press release that the findings suggested that “legislation blocking gender-affirming care among TGD [transgender and gender-diverse] youth is not about protecting children, but it is rooted in bias and stigma.”

Dai continued, “These government actions are intended to address a perceived issue that doesn’t actually exist.”

Organizations like the Human Rights Campaign emailed the public shortly after the announcements on Thursday to express their concern about the new regulations that the Trump administration has proposed.

The Human Rights Campaign posted a 60-day “comment period” on its social media page, stating that “these rules now face a 60-day comment period.”

“A lot of comments can stifle it, force changes, or lay the foundation for upcoming litigation.” That’s where YOU begin, YES.

Current legislative actions

27 states, including significant population centers like Texas, Ohio, and Florida, currently forbid gender-affirming care for minors.

In the process, according to the Human Rights Campaign, nearly 40% of the 300,000 transgender youth in the US reside in states where they may not have access to the care they may need.

Actions taken at the federal level have been backed up by those states. In a six-to-three vote, the conservative majority on the Supreme Court upheld Tennessee’s ban on providing minors with gender-affirming care.

A bill passed by the US House of Representatives on Wednesday that would make providing gender-affirming care to patients under 18 illegal. The bill’s passage to the Senate, where it faces uncertain outcomes, was supported by 216 representatives, including several Democrats.

On Thursday, a new House bill is scheduled to be approved in order to end Medicaid benefits for transgender youth seeking gender-affirming care.

While opponents point out that some gender-affirming treatments, including puberty blockers, are reversible and can protect teenagers from physical and emotional harm, advocates point out that some of these treatments, including those that are used for puberty, may cause regrets for young people later in life.

Representative Sarah McBride, the first openly transgender member of the House, said she thinks the general public is less aware of the benefits of gender-affirming therapies.

McBride told reporters, “I understand the need for this care and how difficult it is to understand it.” However, one of the things that gets so lost in this discussion is that today’s transgender adults were once-culturally diverse. I once had a problem.

She continued, “I never had a childhood without that pain,” which is my biggest regret in life.

McBride criticized the “hate” she believed was the cause of the legislation and cast a ballot against it. She later wrote on social media that “politicians should never get themselves into the personal health care decisions of patients, parents, and their providers,” and that includes trans Americans.

Kennedy, in contrast, said he anticipated lawsuits from the Trump administration to challenge the changes.

“I believe that will occur,” she said. He claimed that it is nearly impossible to count the number of lawsuits involving my name right now.

Tannane goal from own half sets Morocco on way to FIFA Arab Cup 2025 title

Morocco won the Qatar-hosted tournament’s second FIFA Arab Cup title with a 3-2 victory over Jordan after extra time thanks to Oussama Tannane’s wonder goal from inside his own half.

When Qatar-based footballer Tannane fired a shot well over the halfway line, which was estimated to be 59 meters, to catch out goalkeeper Yazeed Abulaila, the crowd at Lusail Stadium in Doha on Thursday was quickly on their feet.

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In an effort to stop the shot, the Jordan keeper scurried back to his line in a protracted four-minute stoppage before being cleared to continue and the game resumed.

Jordan’s return to take the lead only served as the start of a contentious final, which saw the match be adjourned to extra time, with Jordanian hearts broken just seconds away from their first regular-time FIFA Arab Cup title.

Oussama Tannane beat Jordan’s Yazeed Abulaila for the first goal.

Ali Oliwan pulled away from his marker to head home from close range after a well-worked corner, and Jordan, who had already lost to the 2025 AFC Asian Cup, equaled three minutes into the second period.

After Mahmoud Almardi’s shot struck Achraf El Mahdioui’s raised hand inside the box, Oliwan converted from the penalty spot for his second in the 68th minute.

However, the drama was not over until second-half substitute Abderrazak Hamdallah scored in the opening goal after a corner-scoring scramble.

However, Oliwan had a shot at glory with the final kick of normal time when, with Jordan without a shot that would have also come off his hat-trick, he was unable to beat the goalkeeper.

With Mohannad Abutaha volleying a stunning left-footed effort into the top right corner from the left edge of the box, many fans may not have been able to enjoy Tannane’s opener. Similar to Tannane’s, his strike was deserving of winning any final, but VAR ruled out the goal due to the Jordanian’s controlled handball before the effort was launched.

After Marwane Saadane’s bicycle kick from a set piece fell kindly into his path from close range, Hamdallah tapped in the winning goal.

Morocco's Marwane Saadane shoots at goal
Marwane Saadane’s shot at goal earned his side a victory [Thaier Al-Sudani/Reuters]

In the Saudi Arabian final, Morocco defeated Libya in the previous year’s Arab Cup. Algeria defeated Tunisia in the final four years of its existence, the Atlas Lions.

Morocco had a dominant opening period, and Tannane, who plays for Umm Salal in the Qatar league, had a fantastic opportunity to double the lead on the stroke of half-time when Abulaila spilled a cross into his path. However, the forward had to make a clean connection with his left-footed follow-up, and Issam Smeir slid off the line.

The Jordanian stopper was forced to keep his foot on the ball all the way through the opening period, and Karim El Berkaoui made his best save in the 17th minute when he drove across Tannane’s face from the edge of the box with a one-two equal to it, but Abulaila was on his right to push the effort wide.

Morocco will now concentrate on hosting the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations, where a number of their European-based stars who had to prioritize club over country during the Arab Cup had the task of making it the first African nation to do so.

More than a million tickets were sold at the 2025 edition of the FIFA Arab Cup, which was more than double the number of tickets sold at the previous competition four years ago.

Morocco's Abderazak Hamdallah celebrates
Morocco’s third goal, scored by Abderrazak Hamdallah, seals the FIFA Arab Cup 2025 final in Lusail, Qatar, on December 18, [Mohammed Salem/Reuters]

White House accuses South Africa of harassing US gov’t staff in latest row

Donald Trump’s administration has accused officials of harassing and extorting employees who work with white Afrikaners in recent weeks.

The charge was made on Thursday by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who was working with the US to process the relocations of seven Kenyan nationals.

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According to South Africa, those who are granted tourist visas are therefore not permitted to work.

Washington “condemns in the strongest terms” when Rubio claimed that US citizens had also been briefly detained in the imbroglio in a statement.

He added that officials’ passport information had been leaked, making it “an unacceptable form of harassment” that could put the victims “in harm’s way.”

He said that if the South African government fails to hold those accountable, severe consequences will result.

No US officials were detained in the raid, which South Africa claims did not take place at a diplomatic site. The US employing workers with the appropriate documentation “raises serious questions about intent and diplomatic protocol,” according to South Africa’s Department of International Relations and Cooperation.

The Trump administration has been putting pressure on South African President Cyril Ramaphosa’s government for months, claiming it vehemently supports the country’s white Afrikaner farmers’ persecution. In far-right circles, the allegations had previously gained ground.

At a raucous White House gathering in May, senior elected officials, including Afrikaner leaders, publicly refute the claims, calling them false.

However, the Trump administration has continued to relocate Afrikaners through the refugee program.

That comes as the administration has stifled access to refugees from almost all other nationalities, dropping admissions from 7,500 for 2026, which is against what human rights organizations have labeled as flagrant racism.

Trump Media to merge with nuclear fusion company to power AI

Just days after industry representatives urged federal funding, Donald Trump, the president of the United States, merged his social media company with Google-backed TAE Technologies for a $ 6 billion deal.

The Trump family’s growing list of diverse ventures, including real estate holdings and mobile services, includes the all-stock deal, which was announced on Thursday. It is an ambitious bet on the power boom spurred by artificial intelligence (AI) data centres.

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In recent months, the technology sector’s growing electricity demand has revived interest in nuclear power, including restarting fully operational reactors, expanding existing ones, and signing contracts for upcoming small modular reactors.

However, despite decades of international efforts, nuclear fusion, which is frequently regarded as a safe and trustworthy power source, has yet to have a commercially viable reactor.

Chevron and Sumitomo Corporation of Americas are among the companies that TAE has supported for more than a decade in fusion science.

The business, which was established in 1998, also has a life sciences division that develops biologically targeted radiotherapy for cancer treatment.

After the deal closes in the middle of 2026, the two companies’ shareholders will own approximately 50% of the total. The holding companies for TAE Power Solutions, TAE Life Sciences, and Truth Social platform will be Trump Media and Technology Group.

Major political support

Early trading saw a rise in Trump Media shares, which increased by nearly 33 percent, on Stocktwits, a social media platform for retail investors. This year, the stock of the money-losing business dropped by nearly 70%.

According to Wedbush analyst Dan Ives, “TAE will obviously have major political support from President Trump.”

Trump’s close relatives have started businesses to use his political influence and policy changes following his election victory this year. As the president throws his support behind digital financial assets, the Trump family has, for instance, amassed billions in crypto-related wealth.

National laboratories and business have long worked to promote fusion reactions, which combine light atoms in excruciating temperatures to release a lot of energy, a process that fuels the sun.

Making fusion more energy out of a reaction than what enters it and creating plants that can withstand fusion reaction streams to power the grid are significant obstacles to commercializing fusion.

This month, just weeks after the US Energy Department established its first fusion office, TAE CEO Michl Binderbauer and other fusion company leaders met with US Energy Department officials.

Terms of the agreement

The business, which has raised more than $1.3 billion in private funding, wants to create and market the most affordable neutral beam systems for fusion and related applications.

Trump Media has agreed to give TAE up to $200 million in cash upon registration filing, and $100 more upon signing. The boards of the businesses have approved the deal.

The first utility-scale fusion power plant in the world will be constructed by the two companies next year. In an investor call, Trump Media CEO Devin Nunes, the Republican congressman who resigned in 2021 to take over as the company’s CEO, stated that the companies intend to “quickly seek approvals” once the deal is closed, with plans to find a location for the plant set to begin by the end of 2026.

Nunes did not provide any additional information about the brief, eight-minute investor call.

Along with Binderbauer, he will also serve as the new company’s co-CEO. Nunes, Binderbauer, and Donald Trump Junior will serve on the combined company’s nine-member board.

BP taps Woodside’s Meg O’Neill as CEO as it pivots back to fossil fuels

BP has tapped Woodside Energy’s Meg O’Neill as its next CEO, its first external hire for the post in more than a century and the first woman to lead a top-five oil major as the firm pivots back to fossil fuels.

O’Neill, an Exxon veteran, will take over in April following the abrupt departure of Murray Auchincloss, the second CEO change in just over two years as the British oil major strives to improve its profitability and share performance, which for years has lagged competitors like Exxon.

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The company embarked on a major strategy shift earlier this year, slashing billions in planned renewable energy initiatives and shifting its focus back to traditional oil and gas. BP has pledged to divest $20bn in assets by 2027, including its Castrol lubricants unit, and reduce debt and costs.

“Progress has been made in recent years, but increased rigour and diligence are required to make the necessary transformative changes to maximise value for our shareholders,” new BP Chair Albert Manifold said in a statement.

When Manifold took up his post in October, he emphasised the need for a deeper reshaping of BP’s portfolio to increase profitability and faced pressure from activist investor Elliott Investment Management, one of BP’s largest shareholders, which called for him to urgently address the company’s shortcomings.

Elliott saw the change of CEO as a sign of BP’s willingness to act swiftly to deliver cost cuts and divestments, a person familiar with the situation said.

An external change

O’Neill, a 55-year-old American from Boulder, Colorado, and the first openly gay woman to helm a FTSE 100 company, headed Woodside since 2021, having previously spent 23 years at Exxon.

Under O’Neill’s leadership, Woodside merged with BHP Group’s petroleum arm to create a top 10 global independent oil and gas producer valued at $40bn and doubled Woodside’s oil and gas production.

The acquisition took the company to the US, where it embarked on a major Louisiana liquefied natural gas project, which it is progressing in an LNG market braced for oversupply.

BP spent more than 40 percent of its $16.2bn investment budget in the United States last year and plans to boost its US output to 1 million barrels of oil equivalent per day by the end of the decade.

Markets react

Woodside shares fell as much as 2.9 percent after news of O’Neill’s departure. At BP, shares were up 0.3 percent, compared with a broader index of European energy companies.

Like BP, Woodside shares have underperformed rivals. In absolute terms, though, the stock has risen about 10 percent during O’Neill’s tenure.

BP’s executive vice president, Carol Howle, will serve as interim CEO. Auchincloss, 55, will step down on Thursday and serve in an advisory role until December 2026.

BP said O’Neill’s appointment was part of its long-term succession planning, though it had not publicly announced a search process.

Auchincloss became CEO in 2024, taking over from Bernard Looney, who was fired after lying to the board about personal relationships with colleagues.

After an ill-fated foray into renewables under Looney, BP has promised to increase profitability and cut costs while re-routing spending to focus on oil and gas, launching a review in August of how best to develop and monetise oil and gas production assets.

During BP’s third-quarter earnings call last month, the company did not give an update on the closely watched sale process for its Castrol lubricants unit, the centrepiece of its $20bn asset-sale drive to slash its debt pile.

“We question whether this is set to change BP’s thinking once again on key strategic initiatives – should they defer the sale of Castrol? We think yes. Should they cut the buyback to zero and repair the balance sheet further? We think yes,” said RBC analyst Biraj Borkhataria.