It was an important debate among the Olympic managers before US President Donald Trump was already present for an important debate among the Olympic managers who signed an important debate that she signed in Los Angeles before the 2028 summer games.
In a speech before signing the document on Wednesday, Trump said that he wanted the International Olympic Committee “everything” has everything to do with this absolutely ridiculous topic “.
The outgoing IOC President Thomas Bach, who had a tense meeting with Trump during his first term in the White House, avoided taking a strong attitude to this topic, but many of the seven candidates who replace him this year to replace him to replace.
Sebastian Coe, head of World Athletics, the global athletics, seemed to support Trump’s position in his X account.
“The integrity of the competition in the category of women is a fundamental principle of sports sports and as we know that everything begins in schools,” said Coe, a twice Olympic Olympic champion of 1,500 meters from Great Britain. “Clear, clear guidelines are a critical first step.”
At the moment, the IOC only recommends sport that make the final decisions about the authorization. The IOC has made it possible for transgender athletes to take part in the Olympic Games since 2004, but it was not until 2021 that the first open transgender athletes competed.
The IOC elections to replace Bach, whose 12-year border reaches and trimmed in June, will take place on March 20 at a meeting in Greece. Some of the candidates have made it clear where they are in the participation of the transgender.
“At World Athletics we consulted clear and consulted guidelines on female justification,” wrote Coe in his manifesto, which was aimed at IOC voters. “I will work for clear, science -based guidelines that protect the female category category.”
Another leading candidate who replaces Bach, Juan Antonio Samaranch Jr., has also asked the IOC to determine clear guidelines on this topic.
“The IOC has a fundamental obligation to protect women’s sports by taking a policy to maintain a clear difference between the categories of men and women,” wrote Samaranch in December.
“Science-informed frameworks” about ideology
In his election manifesto, the head of the ski wage, Johan Eliasch, said that the IOC wants to determine the rules, “led by biological facts, not cultural trends”.
“Regardless of the current testosterone level, the exposure compared to puberty creates gender differences in size, weight and what can offer a sporting advantage,” said Eliasch and demanded “scientifically informed framework” about the ideology.
The International Cycling Union pursued the transgender policy of Aquatic and athletics in July 2023, although its President David Lappartient was more careful in his Olympic manifesto. He suggested that the IOC should have Olympic sports bodies with common principles, while “we have to accept that the answer can vary from one sport to the next”.
The only woman among the seven IOC candidates, the two-time floating Olympic gold medalist Kirsty Coventry, did not go directly into the gender problem in her manifest and wrote instead of “protecting women’s sports by protecting athletes”.
But in an interview with the BBC two weeks ago, she said it was the obligation of the IOC to ensure equal opportunities and fairness.
Coventry and Simbabwe-Hat sports ministers last week at an IOC-eventual event for candidates, said: “We will learn lessons along the street, and we will be stronger and we will meet better rules and regulations.”
The other two candidates – Prince Feisal Al Hussein from Jordan and President of the Gymnastics Association Morinari Watanabe – did not deal in their documents, although Prince Feisal emphasized the gender equality and equal opportunities.
The next IOC leader has to work with Trump
The next IOC leader needs a functioning work relationship with the Trump administration before the Olympic Games in Los Angeles.
Trump said that he had Kristi Noem, “all the visa proposals of men who try to enter the United States fraudulently and to identify as athletes”.
Bach, the outgoing IOC President, said on Thursday that he was not familiar with Trump’s comments the night before.
“I am not aware of these comments. Let’s see,” said Bach in Milan at an event that was open for a year until the 2026 Winter Olympics.
Later on Thursday, the IOC replied to a request for comments on this topic: “With the respective international sports associations, the IOC will further explain and discuss the various topics with the responsible authorities.”