
McNabb says Delta Zeta expelled her after speaking out against male in women’s bathroom
Payton McNabb, one of the most vocal young athletes for women’s sports, revealed this week how her college sorority kicked her out for opposing a male student in the women’s bathroom.
Delta Zeta leaders informed McNabb in a letter that she was expelled for violating the sorority’s “Anti-Bullying” and “Moral-Prejudicial Conduct” policies, The Daily Signal reports.
“I was kicked out of my sorority for stating the simple truth: men don’t belong in women’s bathrooms,” McNabb wrote Friday on X.
“Instead of standing by me, they chose to appease a grown man living in a false reality. The organization meant to empower women turned its back on one to protect a lie,” the former high school volleyball athlete said.
McNabb (pictured) is an ambassador for the Independent Women’s Forum who speaks alongside Riley Gaines and others about the importance of keeping men out of women’s spaces.
As a high school athlete, McNabb sustained a traumatic brain injury from a volleyball spike by a biological male playing on an opposing girls’ team. The athlete identified as transgender.
On Tuesday, President Donald Trump honored McNabb by mentioning her in his address to U.S. Congress. The president recently signed an executive order prohibiting male athletes from competing in women’s sports.
Now in college, McNabb said her sorority kicked her for expressing her views. It happened last May, but she shared the experience for the first time this week with The Signal:
The sorority Delta Zeta expelled McNabb on May 20, 2024, finding her guilty of violating the sorority’s “Anti-Bullying Policy” and of engaging in “Moral-Prejudicial Conduct.” The bullying violation involves any activity “reasonably perceived as being dehumanizing, intimidating, hostile, threatening, or otherwise likely to evoke fear of physical harm or emotional distress.” The prejudicial conduct violation involves conduct that may bring the sorority “into disrepute.”
Her offense? Calmly confronting a man in a dress in a women’s restroom, recording him out of fear for her safety, and posting the video on X to warn other young women.
A man using the girls bathroom at Western Carolina University. Unreal pic.twitter.com/yPXXBN8Aqd
— Payton McNabb (@paytonmcnabb_) May 2, 2024
McNabb received strong support from her local sorority chapter, and explained to Delta Zeta leaders that her beliefs are based on her faith and personal experiences, according to the report.
What’s more, the sorority constitution states, “Membership in Delta Zeta may be obtained only by initiation into a college chapter and it is only open to women who are matriculated students, former students and faculty of colleges and universities of recognized standing.”
However, national sorority leaders decided to expel her anyway.
“It is unfortunate that sororities have decided their mission is to serve a left-wing ideology and not a sisterhood,” she told The Signal.
MORE: Student becomes voice for women’s sports after injury playing male athlete
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