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Labour has broken its promises on single-sex spaces

Keir Starmer is still in thrall to trans activists. Credit: Getty

December 19, 2024 - 1:00pm

The Government has quietly broken another promise it made to women. Not the Waspi cohort this time, although that was bad enough. Now Anneliese Dodds, the laughably-titled Minister for Women and Equalities, has given a pat on the head to men who want to use women-only spaces. The announcement was sneaked out in a dry statement from the Government’s Office for Equality and Opportunity earlier this week, and amounts to nothing less than the acceptance of an informal policy of self-ID in shops, gyms and refuges.

The change is buried in a report on the way organisations interpret the single-sex exception in the 2010 Equality Act. Earlier this year Dodds’s predecessor as women’s minister, Kemi Badenoch, launched a call for evidence to discover whether public and private bodies were wrongly suggesting that people have a legal right to access single-sex spaces on the basis of self-ID. Badenoch takes a robust line on men who want to invade women-only spaces, but the responses have fallen into the hands of a government much more open to the unrelenting demands of trans activists.

According to Dodds, the replies indicate that some organisations are operating a policy of allowing men to access single-sex spaces which “correspond with their self-identified gender”. But, she argues that this is not a breach of the law so long as they don’t “incorrectly suggest that this is mandated by the Act”. Companies can allow men into women-only toilets and changing rooms, in other words, as long as they claim it’s their own policy and not based on the act.

It’s self-ID by the back door, as Sex Matters was quick to point out. “It’s a green light to any man who wants to get naked in front of women, in spaces that are supposed to be women-only,” the organisation declared on X yesterday. Dr Michael Foran, a leading expert on equality law, thinks it may not even be legal. “Important development on the govs [sic] position on single-sex services, suggesting it is lawful to operate a single-sex service on a mixed-sex basis determined by Self-ID,” he wrote online. “I don’t think this is correct,” he added with admirable restraint, pointing out that it might amount to indirect discrimination or harassment.

It certainly appears to break Labour’s manifesto commitment to uphold single-sex spaces. It also contradicts Keir Starmer’s insistence, during the general election campaign, that it’s “very important” to protect them. Does his government care? Not likely. Labour’s eagerness to suck up to Stonewall and PinkNews in Opposition hardly suggested the party could be trusted with women’s rights.

Even Labour’s most disillusioned supporters, however, did not expect so many announcements penalising women within months of the election. This week the Waspi women affected by changes in the state pension age, who were promised “fair and fast” compensation by Starmer when he was leader of the Opposition, were rewarded with a slap in the face. At least half a dozen members of his current Cabinet made similar pledges, which they’re now content to ignore.

Labour used to be the party of equality. Now, it’s notorious for a series of broken promises. Starmer’s own problem with women has long been evident, but this latest in a series of betrayals suggests his government is happy to treat them with contempt too.


Joan Smith is a novelist and columnist. She was previously Chair of the Mayor of London’s Violence Against Women and Girls Board. Her book Unfortunately, She Was A Nymphomaniac: A New History of Rome’s Imperial Women was published in November 2024.

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Judy Englander
Judy Englander
3 hours ago

It’s bad, I agree. But here’s another take on this. Companies wishing to cave on the issue can no longer hide behind “we can’t do anything about it, guv, it’s the law”. They will now have to justify themselves when challenged (challenges which will surely come). This means they have to decide whether explicitly to align themselves with genderism at a time when it’s becoming less fashionable and less cost-free.

Last edited 3 hours ago by Judy Englander
Karen Arnold
Karen Arnold
16 minutes ago
Reply to  Judy Englander

Exactly, but what about public places used by a variety of people and organisations? Village halls, for example, could decide only its employees can decide who uses which toilet facilities, and the users have to like it or lump it. What if a dance group with small girls was using a hall and a man decides he wants to use the ladies facilities, there could be safeguarding issues.

Evan Heneghan
Evan Heneghan
4 hours ago

Labour have broken their promises to everyone and everything as is their wont. The disheartening truth is that they’re just continuing on from 14 years of betrayal and lies from the Tories, and from Blair and co before that.

Although Reform have done little yet to convince me they have the means and competence to turn the ship around they simply cannot be worse than the saboteurs and traitors who have destroyed the UK over the past 30 years.

Milton Gibbon
Milton Gibbon
4 hours ago

Did anyone really believe Labour on this issue? Unlike the WASPIs who were shamelessly courted and lied to (but I still believe shouldn’t be compensated) if there was a single woman who took Starmer at his word on allowing single-sex spaces then they are fools and deserve it.

carl taylor
carl taylor
8 minutes ago
Reply to  Milton Gibbon

It’s a bit harsh to say ‘they are fools and deserve it’. I do think they should have been less trusting, but when you have a face-to-face with your MP, or a shadow minister if you’re a women’s rights or gay rights charity, and they look you in the eye and guarantee it and even put it in the manifesto, it’s a little difficult to call them liars before the fact.

Jonathan Andrews
Jonathan Andrews
1 hour ago

The men who are keen to access female only spaces are the last men that should be allowed to access female spaces.

No men should be allowed but most of us understand that women have a right to privacy and space away from many. The men that think this is unreasonable are weird.

Nancy G
Nancy G
2 hours ago

If I self-ID as a member of Parliament, can I have all the benefits that MPs are entitled to? Including subsidised dining?

Jonathan Andrews
Jonathan Andrews
1 hour ago
Reply to  Nancy G

And boozing. Don’t forget the booze

Tyler Durden
Tyler Durden
4 hours ago

They are a sad shower of a political party. They are closest in spirit to Trudeau’s rabble where there are murmurings that his party may become extinct like the Canadian conservatives once did.
I actually think that in the UK this is more likely of Labour than the Tories. The Conservatives can reinvent themselves but Labour risk being completely discredited by British culture aside from their trade union funders.

John Tyler
John Tyler
2 hours ago

Labour believes in two tier equality.

Stephen Feldman
Stephen Feldman
1 hour ago
Reply to  John Tyler

Labour Keir style believes in nothing.

David Morley
David Morley
2 hours ago

In Switzerland they put issues of this kind to the public in the form of a referendum. It’s a shame we don’t do this more in the U.K.

El Uro
El Uro
21 minutes ago
Reply to  David Morley

Because your authorities are afraid of the result. For the same reason, Macron introduced the right to abortion into the French constitution not through a referendum, but through a roundabout way available in the French legal system. Generally speaking, the presence of the right to abortion in the constitution is the most blatant attack on Western tradition.

Lennon Ó Náraigh
Lennon Ó Náraigh
4 hours ago

Hopefully the Waspi women will get their compensation. Sounds like they were very badly treated. Maybe men will be allowed to identify as women and get compensation too.

Stephen Feldman
Stephen Feldman
1 hour ago

1960. What would people do then?
Do it now. Offended? Good. 1960.