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USDA Axes Transgender Menstrual Study Grant
The US Department of Agriculture has terminated a 600000 dollar grant for studying menstrual cycles in transgender men. Secretary Brooke Rollins announced the decision calling it a misuse of taxpayer funds. The move scraps a project that had drawn fierce criticism from conservative lawmakers.
The grant awarded last year aimed to explore how hormone treatments affect menstruation in biological females identifying as male. Researchers planned to track cycles and health outcomes over several years. Opponents decried it as frivolous spending on an ideological agenda irrelevant to agriculture.
Rollins acted swiftly to cancel the program after taking office under the new administration. She argued the USDA’s mission is to support farmers and food production not gender studies. Her decision aligns with a broader push to eliminate what critics call wasteful federal projects.
The study’s defenders including some scientists say it could have yielded valuable medical insights. They note transgender healthcare remains under-researched despite growing demand. Critics counter that such work belongs in private institutions not government agencies like the USDA.
Lawmakers had pressured the department for months to ditch the grant amid budget debates. They pointed to the 600000 dollar price tag as an example of bloated bureaucracy. Public reaction has split along predictable lines with some cheering the cut and others decrying it as anti-LGBT bias.
The cancellation reflects a shift in priorities as the administration targets programs seen as out of touch. Rollins has vowed to redirect USDA resources toward rural development and food security. This marks one of several recent rollbacks of initiatives tied to progressive social causes.
Affected researchers expressed dismay saying the abrupt end disrupts years of planning. They now face uncertainty about funding and the future of their work. The USDA offered no comment on whether the data collected so far will be preserved or discarded.
The decision fuels ongoing debates over the role of science in government and who gets to define its value. It also signals tighter scrutiny of federal spending under Rollins’ leadership. For now the focus at USDA is squarely on traditional agriculture not transgender health studies.
Coverage Details
| Total News Sources | 23 |
| Left | 7 |
| Right | 9 |
| Center | 6 |
| Unrated | 1 |
| Bias Distribution | 39% Right |
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