Alan Levine, chair of Florida’s Board of Governors, sent a letter to the Liaison Committee on Medical Education asking how medical schools could retain accreditation if they endorse gender‑affirming care for minors. Levine described such treatments as “unproven and dangerous” and pressed the accreditor for a public stance. The request amplifies an ongoing state campaign to challenge traditional accrediting bodies and dovetails with Florida’s earlier moves to open the door to alternative accreditors. Major medical societies—including the American Academy of Pediatrics—support gender‑affirming care for minors, putting national standards at odds with the board chair’s demand. If accreditors respond by resisting political pressure, Florida officials have signaled they may seek alternative oversight arrangements. The dispute threatens medical-school autonomy, student clinical training pipelines and multistate recognition of degrees.