Minister hopes supreme court’s gender ruling will ‘draw a line’ under trans debate – UK politics live | Politics

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Minister hopes supreme court ruling on gender will ‘draw a line’ under debate

A minister has said she hopes the outcome of the supreme court’s ruling on the legal definition of the term woman will draw a line under arguments over gender recognition.

Asked if she welcomed the ruling, health minister Karin Smyth told Sky News: “Yes. I think it’s good that we have clarity for women, and the women who brought this case, and for service providers providing services.”

Asked whether she thought the ruling would further inflame arguments, the minister said: “No, I really hope that it does draw a line under it by clarifying what sex means, by clarifying that people have different protected rights under the Equality Act and being very clear to all organisations what that means.”

Questioned on what she would say to trans people worried about the ruling, Smyth said:

Rights remain enshrined in the Equality Act. There are protected characteristics for trans people under the gender recognition part of the Equality Act.

If there are changes to be made, that needs to be looked at carefully with the guidance, but this law was about women’s rights and rights under the Equality Act for sex and for service providers making sure they are compliant with that.

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Supreme court ruling ‘enormously consequential’, says chair of Equality and Human Rights Commission

The chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) has described yesterday’s ruling by the supreme court over gender recognition and biological sex as “enormously consequential”.

She told listeners of the BBC Radio 4 Today programme “The ruling is enormously consequential, and it does bring clarity, that is undoubtedly the case. It’s a very readable judgment, and organisations should be taking care to read it and to understand that it does bring clarity, helps them decide what they should do.”

With regard to single-sex spaces, she said:

Single-sex services like changing rooms must be based on biological sex. If a male person is allowed to use a women-only service or facility, it isn’t any longer single-sex, then it becomes a mixed-sex space.

But I have to say, there’s no law that forces organisations, service providers, to provide a single-sex space, and there is no law against them providing a third space, an additional space, such as unisex toilets, for example, or changing rooms.

There isn’t any law saying that you cannot use a neutral third space, and they [trans rights organisations] should be using their powers of advocacy to ask for those third spaces.

Falkner said, though, the ruling made it clear that people assigned male at birth cannot take part in women’s sport.

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