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Online Tech Guru > News > The Federal Agency Coming for Gender-Affirming Care
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The Federal Agency Coming for Gender-Affirming Care

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Last updated: 24 April 2026 11:18
By News Room 5 Min Read
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The Federal Agency Coming for Gender-Affirming Care
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The Federal Trade Commission appears to be targeting transgender rights, going beyond its usual ways of operating to do so, according to experts and federal employees who spoke to WIRED.

Since July 2025, the agency has been gearing up to frame gender-affirming care for minors as a consumer-protection issue, in a move that a former FTC employee, who spoke to WIRED on the condition of anonymity due to fear of retaliation, described as “very strange.”

“I think their end goal here is to be on the front page, being warriors for the Trump anti-trans agenda,” they claim.

In January, the agency began requesting documents and materials from nonprofits that support health care providers who provide care to transgender people. The FTC issued what are known as civil investigative demands (CIDs)—instruments similar to subpoenas that an agency can use to conduct investigations—to the American Academy of Pediatrics, World Professional Association for Transgender Health, and the Endocrine Society. The cases are being brought by the agency’s Bureau of Consumer Protection.

“The FTC has brought lots of cases around phony cures, phony health products,” the former employee says. But those cases were targeted around issues like businesses peddling fake Covid cures. In cases where the FTC has gone after nonprofits, the former employee says, it has involved the nonprofit misappropriating donations.

These investigations will be spearheaded by Glenna Goldis, a former New York state assistant attorney general who claims she was fired by the Office of New York Attorney General Letitia James for “speaking out against pediatric gender medicine.” In a podcast interview, Goldis said that she hoped to “bankrupt” doctors, including leading them to lose “medical licenses” and “teaching licenses.” A recent update to the FTC’s organization chart shows Goldis listed as assistant director for special projects (children and adolescents). “The Office of the Attorney General has protocols and rules for all employees, including for outside activities if an employee chooses to engage in them,” a spokesperson for the New York Attorney General’s office told WIRED in a statement. “This employee no longer works for the office due to her violation of those protocols and rules.”

Around the same time that Goldis was brought into the agency, the FTC began posting job applications for lawyers whose roles appeared to be dedicated to investigating gender-affirming care. These job postings from earlier this year reveal that the FTC is hiring lawyers at the highest levels of the federal pay scale whose work will focus on “unfair and deceptive practices impacting children and families, including investigations relating to pediatric gender dysphoria treatment.”

The former FTC employee described the agency’s move to target nonprofits as “really weird” and said it was “very unusual” to hire lawyers for a specific project or case as opposed to recruiting people based on skill sets, like data protection.

In response to questions from WIRED, FTC spokesperson Joseph Simonson said, “Virtually everything you asked is based off a complete misunderstanding of the law, this agency, and the issue of whether children are potentially suffering from unnecessary mutilation. Stick to computers.”

Fighting back against an FTC investigation is time-consuming and expensive. In a declaration supporting a motion to dismiss the CIDs in February, Mila Becker, the chief policy officer at the Endocrine Society, wrote that her organization estimates that “our costs could be well over $500,000 plus weeks of IT and other relevant staff time.” For nonprofits, she said, “this cost and staff burden is not easily absorbed and would have significant effect on our budget.” Becker also notes that the organization possesses documents that “may involve third parties with their own privacy interests, or sensitive patient or health data” that would need to be anonymized.

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