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Disenfranchising Queer Freedoms: How the Transgender Amendment Bill 2026 Mistakes Biology for Identity and Leaves Everyone Worse Off

What this law ultimately does — what we must name plainly — is disenfranchise. For transgender persons, the dispossession is immediate and bodily: the law now says your body must be read by a magistrate before your identity is real, that your self-knowledge is legally insufficient.

An account from a cis-gay man perspective

There is a particular kind of grief that comes not from an unexpected catastrophe but from watching something you hoped was behind you walk back through the door. I felt it last week — a cis-gay Indian man sitting with the full text of the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Bill, 2026 — not as a legal scholar, but as someone who has spent years watching this country slowly, haltingly, learn to hold more of its own people. This comes from watching my trans friends break down after passage, and from the irresponsible discussions and chaos that unfolded in the two weeks that followed.

That learning from “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam” — the world is one family — it seems, has been reversed.

Parliament passed the bill on March 25, after it cleared the Rajya Sabha by voice vote, just days after a similar voice vote in the Lok Sabha. Twelve days from introduction to passage. No standing committee referral. No meaningful public consultation. Notably, the bill was introduced without dialogue with statutory bodies like the National Council for Transgender Persons and since its passage, two NCTP members, Rituparna Neog and Kalki Subramaniam, have resigned in protest. In twelve days, the Indian state rewrote not just a law but a philosophy. And got the philosophy profoundly wrong.

The Section That Started Everything: The Redefinition of a Person

The most consequential change is buried in an amendment to a definitional clause. The 2019 Act defined a transgender person as someone “whose gender does not match with the gender assigned to that person at birth” — imperfect, contested, but constitutionally grounded. It drew from the Supreme Court’s landmark 2014 NALSA judgment, in which Justice K.S. Radhakrishnan explicitly held that gender identity is self-determined, and that no person should undergo medical tests simply to be acknowledged by law.

The 2026 Bill replaces this with a narrower list: socio-cultural identities like Hijra, Kinner, Aravani, and Jogata; intersex persons; and those with specific congenital variations. Trans men, trans women, and genderqueer persons who don’t fit these categories are effectively written out of the legislation entirely. Section 4(2) of the 2019 Act which gave every transgender person the right to self-perceived gender identity has been deleted. Its removal is not an administrative clarification. It is the state reaching into the legal text and removing a person’s right to know themselves.

This is not refinement. This is amputation.

The Sex-Gender Confusion at the Heart of This Bill

Sex and gender are not the same thing. Sex refers to biological characteristics — chromosomal, hormonal, gonadal. Gender is the internal, psychological, social sense of who one is. They often align. They sometimes do not. This is not ideology; it is the settled position of medicine, psychology, and the Supreme Court of India itself.

The NALSA judgment unambiguously rejected the “Biological Test” for determining gender, a principle inherited from outdated English law. The 2026 Bill does not merely ignore this distinction — it actively collapses it. The Statement of Objects and Reasons claims protection should be limited to those who face exclusion due to “biological reasons for no fault of their own and no choice of their own.” This sentence is philosophically incoherent. It treats gender identity as a lifestyle choice while treating intersex status as authentic because it appears bodily, fixed, and legible to the state. The people who pay the price for that confusion are always those whose identities are least familiar to power.

The Medical Onslaught: Sections 6 and 7

Even for those who survive the definitional cull, the bill builds new barriers. Under the amended Section 6, a District Magistrate may issue a certificate of identity only after examining the recommendation of a medical board headed by a Chief Medical Officer. This effectively replaces the principle of self-perceived identity with a medicalised process, placing identity determination in the hands of state authorities rather than the individual.

The amended Section 7 goes further: medical institutions must now report details of anyone who undergoes gender-affirming surgery to the District Magistrate. The state wants to know — and wants records kept, forms filled, officials notified.

To understand the scale of the existing failure this doubles down on: as of 2026, India’s census recorded approximately 487,000 transgender persons, yet only around 32,500 identity cards have been issued nationwide. The system is already broken by red tape and official misclassification. This bill responds to that failure by adding more gates, more paperwork, more officials.

Section 18: Penalties With a Double Edge

The bill’s substitution of Section 18 deserves both credit and deep suspicion. For the first time, it introduces graded punishments for serious crimes: kidnapping an adult and causing grievous harm carries ten years to life imprisonment; the same crime against a child carries life. These provisions attempt to address crimes of coercion and mutilation that the community has long faced.

But the same section creates offences around compelling someone to “assume, adopt, or outwardly present a transgender identity” through “allurement, inducement or deceit.” This language is dangerously broad. It could be turned against community elders, trans support networks, and the parents of trans children — effectively criminalising the very support structures that trans people most depend on. The bill claims to protect a community while simultaneously treating that community’s internal bonds as potential criminal conspiracies.

Where the Government Is Lost

The Statement of Objects and Reasons contains a sentence that reveals everything: “Any enactment conferring rights, privileges and protections cannot have a definition clause whereby the status entitling such rights, privileges and protections can be acquired.”

Read that again. The government is arguing that identity — the status that gives you rights — cannot be something you come to know about yourself over time. It must be biologically fixed, externally verifiable, administratively stamped. This is the state saying: we do not trust you to know who you are.

This is precisely the logic that Section 377 operated on for 160 years. Our desire was treated as a choice, a corruption — not as something we simply were. The Navtej Johar judgment in 2018 rejected that logic. NALSA had already rejected its equivalent for trans persons a decade before. The 2026 Bill walks back through a door the Supreme Court had shut.

And then there is “Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas, Sabka Vishwas” — with everyone, for everyone, trusted by everyone. One must ask, with this bill in hand: which sabka? The transgender person turned away by a magistrate who cannot pronounce their identity is not included in that saath. The trans man who no longer exists in this law’s definition has not received that vikas. The community that watched this bill pass in twelve days — no committee, no consultation, no hearings — has been given no reason whatsoever for vishwas.

The Window Has Closed

Update, March 31: President Droupadi Murmu has given her assent to the bill. It is now law. The window for reconsideration that many of us hoped for — however narrow — has closed. The 140-plus lawyers, law students, feminists, and activists who wrote to the President urging her to withhold assent were not heard. A Supreme Court-appointed committee headed by retired Delhi High Court judge Justice Asha Menon had also written to the Ministry of Social Justice urging withdrawal. That too was ignored. The bill has become an Act.

What remains is the courts. Legal challenges before the Supreme Court are being prepared. NALSA and Navtej Johar both came from the judiciary when Parliament would not move. They may need to move again. But courts are slow, and cases take years. In the meantime, there are trans people in India who will attempt to get identity documents under this law and be turned away by a magistrate, or by a medical board that has never been trained in anything but pathology. Real lives are shaped by whatever law is currently in force. The legal fight matters enormously — and so does the social one: in workplaces, families, universities, newsrooms — everywhere that trans people are, right now, wondering if they have become more invisible to the state than they were last week.

A Freedom Issue, Not Just a Trans Issue

What this law ultimately does — what we must name plainly — is disenfranchise. For transgender persons, the dispossession is immediate and bodily: the law now says your body must be read by a magistrate before your identity is real, that your self-knowledge is legally insufficient. For the wider LGBTQIA+ spectrum, the disenfranchisement is subtler but no less real. This Act explicitly writes into law that self-perceived sexual and gender identities are excluded from its protections — enshrining the principle that the state may decide which identities are authentic and which are merely claimed.

That principle, once normalised in one law, does not stay there. It migrates. It becomes the ambient logic of how institutions treat all of us — in hospitals, in courts, in schools, at borders. Every queer person in India has built their life on some fragile combination of legal protection, social tolerance, and the quiet courage of simply existing. This Act chips away at all three.

That is not protection; it is occupation.

As a gay man who knows what it is to be unseen by law, I refuse the comfort of distance. The logic that erases my trans siblings is the same logic that once erased me. We did not win our rights by accepting that someone else’s were separate. We will not protect them that way either.

2 thoughts on “Disenfranchising Queer Freedoms: How the Transgender Amendment Bill 2026 Mistakes Biology for Identity and Leaves Everyone Worse Off

  1. As a transwoman who affirmed her gender in 2010, I know that identity is not granted by law but lived with dignity. This amendment risks erasing the diversity of our community, and I stand for inclusion that honors every journey

  2. Such a heartfelt note. We struggle for our existence every day every moment of our life. This struggle has become part of our existence…I only hope we do not normalise it and stop resisting. The resistence has to come from within. I am feeling overwhelmed after reading and thanks Ashish Pandya for articulating our collective pain in such lucid words 🙏

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Biochemist turned marketer, advocating for LGBTQIA+ rights. Leading customer success in genomics, singing with Rainbow Voices Mumbai, and helping shape Mumbai Pride.
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Ashish Pandya

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