❓WHAT HAPPENED: Britain’s ruling Labour Party government has delayed the publication of official guidance requiring single-sex spaces for women, citing concerns over “trans-exclusive” implications.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Women and Equalities Secretary Bridget Phillipson, the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), and campaigners on both sides of the debate.
📍WHEN & WHERE: The guidance has been delayed for over three months following a Supreme Court ruling defining women by biological sex.
💬KEY QUOTE: “Government lawyers, working under Bridget Philipson’s instruction are trying to rewrite the Supreme Court judgment that sex means biological sex.” – Shadow Equalities Minister Claire Coutinho
🎯IMPACT: The delay has sparked criticism from campaigners for women’s rights and safety.
Britain’s ruling Labour Party government has delayed publication of official guidance that would require businesses and public bodies to offer single-sex spaces to women, prolonging a contentious debate over how equality law applies to transgender people. Women and Equalities Secretary Bridget Phillipson has not signed off on the Equality and Human Rights Commission’s (EHRC) draft more than three months after receiving it, drawing criticism from campaigners who say the delay undermines women’s rights and safety. A government spokesman claimed the 300-page draft was legally complex and needed careful review before publication.
The guidance was produced in response to an April Supreme Court ruling that, for the purposes of the Equality Act 2010, a “woman” is defined as someone born biologically female and excludes transgenders from that legal definition in contexts such as access to single-sex spaces. The decision, which clarified that terms like “woman” and “sex” refer to biological sex in equality law, has raised legal and policy questions for service providers and public bodies.
Shadow Equalities Minister Claire Coutinho accused Phillipson of trying “to rewrite the Supreme Court judgment” and failing to enforce the law protecting women’s rights. The Supreme Court decision has already reshaped policy in other areas of British public life. The Football Association confirmed that transgenders will no longer be allowed to compete in women’s soccer in England from June. Girlguiding UK, formerly the Girl Guides, has also announced that transgenders will no longer be permitted to join as new members, a move the organization said was a “difficult decision” following legal advice. Hundreds of woke volunteers have threatened to quit Girlguiding in protest at the policy change.
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