Dana Zzyym fought to get the first nonbinary passport. Now Trump has taken them away

Dana Zzyym fought to get the first nonbinary passport. Now Trump has taken them away
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Dana Zzyym fought to get the first nonbinary passport. Now Trump has taken them away
Author: Josh Marcus
Published: Feb, 02 2025 22:29

A Trump executive order halts the processing of nonbinary passports and sex-change requests on travel documents, leaving scores of applicants in limbo, Josh Marcus reports. In October 2021, Dana Zzyym became the first person to receive a passport with an “X” marked in the sex field, instead of male or female. It wasn’t without a fight. Zzyym, a Navy veteran who is nonbinary and intersex, spent six years battling the State Department in court to get a set of accurate travel documents. Four years later, Donald Trump put people like them in legal limbo on his first day in office.

 [Dana Zzyym indicates the 'X' marker on their passport, a gender-neutral marker federal courts ruled would allow people to have more accurate legal documentation]
Image Credit: The Independent [Dana Zzyym indicates the 'X' marker on their passport, a gender-neutral marker federal courts ruled would allow people to have more accurate legal documentation]

Gender-diverse people already face heightened scrutiny and searches during travel, and the order is only going to make things worse, according to Carl Charles, a senior attorney at Lambda Legal, the advocacy group that represented Zzyym in their fight with the State Department. What’s more, Charles argued, despite Trump claiming his stance is about avoiding ideology and “restoring biological truth to the federal government,” the new policy is actually a partisan position far out of step with the modern scientific understanding of sex and gender.

 [At least 10 countries outside the U.S. offer gender options on passports beyond male and female]
Image Credit: The Independent [At least 10 countries outside the U.S. offer gender options on passports beyond male and female]

“The sex and gender executive order is ideology,” Charles told The Independent. “It's ideology is, ‘Let’s ignore science. Let’s ignore the experts. Let’s ignore people’s lived experiences.’”. It also creates a series of thorny civil rights questions for the new government. “What is the State Department going to do, decide an intersex person’s sex, or make them choose one?” Charles continued. “That goes against a whole host of constitutional principles I can think of.”.

While the Trump order is creating uncertainty for all those with “X” passports, a sudden change in course isn’t exactly a surprise for people like Zzyym. They had to fight their entire life to secure their place in a U.S. system that often creates major hurdles for gender-diverse people to live authentically and legally as themselves. Zzyym was born in 1958. Their birth certificate initially listed their sex as unknown, but their parents decided to conduct a series of irreversible and harmful surgeries on them and raise them as a boy.

By 1994, Zzyym came to realize that maleness had been assigned to them inaccurately, so they changed their name to Dana, and it took about another decade for Zzyym to fully understand that they were intersex. Zzyym became active in intersex activism and in 2014 sought to get a passport to attend a conference in Mexico City. This presented the activist with a conundrum: how do you accurately fill out federal documents when they only offer two choices of sex, neither of which match your lived experience, physical characteristics, or legal history?.

When their passport finally arrived in October 2021, Zzyym broke down in tears. The activist’s passport will last through 2031, but others aren’t so lucky. West Virginia-based trans activist Ash Lazarus Orr told The 19th they applied to update the name and gender marker on their passport a few days before Trump was sworn in, as they observed growing anti-trans sentiment in their state and endured death threats and an attack inside a men’s bathroom.

Orr was told his documents, including his previous passport, his birth certificate, and his marriage license, had been “set aside” indefinitely, as the State Department works to formulate its new policies around the Trump order. The Trump administration may be seeking to roll protections back, but the efforts of people like Zzyym mean there’s now a federal court record recognizing that intersex can’t be ignored within the law.

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