Stonewall boss defends new strategy amid criticism

By Jessica Parker & Eleanor Lawrie BBC News

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media caption Nancy Kelley: "I’m comfortable with our direction as an organisation"

Stonewall head Nancy Kelley has defended the organisation's position amid a freedom of speech row and criticism from a founder.

Matthew Parris said in the Times that Stonewall had become "tangled up in the trans issue" and "cornered into an extremist stance".

But Ms Kelley told the BBC she was "really comfortable " with the direction the charity was going in.

She likened so-called "gender critical" beliefs to anti-Semitism.

The Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) has said its defence of the right to hold "gender critical beliefs" - that sex cannot be changed - "does not have an impact on our commitment to uphold the rights of transgender people".

Freedom of speech 'has limits'

The new EHRC chair, Lady Falkner, has said women have the right to question transgender identity without being abused, stigmatised or risking losing their job.

Ms Kelley said that while Stonewall believed in freedom of speech, it was "not without limit".

"With all beliefs including controversial beliefs there is a right to express those beliefs publicly and where they're harmful or damaging - whether it's anti-Semitic beliefs, gender critical beliefs, beliefs about disability - we have legal systems that are put in place for people who are harmed by that."

Challenged as to whether it might be considered offensive to compare anti-Semitic beliefs to gender-critical views, she insisted it was appropriate.

"We're talking about protected groups. We're talking about people that are protected on the basis of their sexuality, people that are protected on the basis of gender identity, people who are protected on the basis of race and that's why we think the analogy is apt."

image caption Nancy Kelley promised to work closely with the government on its conversion therapy ban

Journalist and former Tory MP Matthew Parris, one of Stonewall's 14 founders, recently suggested the charity had "lost its way".

In an article for the Times, he said: "The organisation is tangled up in the trans issue, cornered into an extremist stance on a debate that a charity formed to help gay men, lesbian women and bisexual people should never have got itself into."

Ms Kelley said while Mr Parris was entitled to his views, being trans-inclusive was the "absolute norm" for LGBT organisations.

She also denied that Stonewall had approved incorrect advice on transgender issues for the University of Essex, which is part of its Diversity Champions workplace inclusion scheme.

A recent report found that the university had unlawfully blacklisted a speaker after some protesters labelled her a "transphobe".

Ms Kelley said Stonewall had "nothing to do" with the university's process for deciding external speakers and was "really confident" in its legal advice.

She also expressed frustration that the volume of media coverage and debate around trans rights meant "it can be difficult to get across all the work we do.... focusing on the experiences of LGB [lesbian, gay and bisexual] people."

She said the organisation's work could still benefit people, whether or not they agreed with its position, such as improving access to IVF.

That aim is part of the organisation's new "free to be" strategy , which includes campaigning for "hate crime and hate speech laws in the UK that protect LGBTQ+ communities" and a pledge to champion inclusion across schools.

Conversion therapy ban delay 'unnecessary'

image copyright Getty Images
image caption Liz Truss is Equalities Minister as well as Secretary of State for International Trade

The strategy also prioritises a "legally enforceable ban on conversion therapy".

Ms Kelley said the consultation process, planned for September, was an "unnecessary delay" but promised to work closely with the government on the ban.

Conversion therapy is defined by health groups, including NHS England, as attempts to change someone's sexuality or gender identity.

It's understood part of the consultation will look at how to ensure certain medical or other accredited professionals won't be criminalised.

But Ms Kelley said that a therapist, helping someone explore their gender identity or sexual orientation, wouldn't be caught by a ban, "because that's not seeking to suppress or change something. That's exploring with you."

She also called for an "individual cabinet level post" to focus on the equalities brief. Liz Truss holds the role as well as being international trade secretary.

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