Cross-Party Opposition Mounts Over New Sex Guidance
A significant parliamentary rebellion is brewing within the Labour party, with over 100 Members of Parliament demanding that new guidance protecting women-only spaces be rejected. A motion has been tabled, signed by 118 MPs, including more than 50 Labour backbenchers, calling for the disapproval of updated advice issued by Britain’s equality watchdog.
Call to Protect Transgender Constituents
The motion was spearheaded by Labour MP Nadia Whittome, representing Nottingham East. She has stated that MPs have a duty to their transgender constituents to oppose the draft code from the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC). Whittome argues that the guidance risks creating an era of enforced segregation for transgender individuals, potentially excluding them from services and facilities they have long accessed without issue. This, she warns, could increase their risk of harassment and violence, effectively marginalizing them from public life.
Broad Parliamentary Support for the Motion
Among the Labour MPs backing Whittome’s early day motion are prominent figures such as John McDonnell, Stella Creasy, and Rebecca Long Bailey. The initiative also garners support from 47 Liberal Democrat MPs, five Scottish National Party (SNP) MPs, and three Green Party MPs. Additionally, independent MP Diane Abbott and Jeremy Corbyn, formerly of the Labour party, have lent their support.
EHRC Guidance Clarifies Biological Sex in Services
The EHRC’s updated guidance, largely welcomed by women’s rights organizations, reiterates that for a service to be classified as single-sex under the Equality Act, it must be used based on biological sex. This interpretation aligns with a landmark Supreme Court ruling from April of last year, which determined that the terms ‘woman’ and ‘sex’ within the Equality Act 2010 refer to biological women and biological sex.
Implications for Single-Sex Spaces
Consequently, the guidance clarifies that single-sex facilities such as toilets, changing rooms, hospital wards, and refuges should be utilized based on an individual’s sex assigned at birth, rather than their identified gender. This updated code of practice, the first comprehensive revision since 2011, spans over 300 pages and addresses nine protected characteristics, including age, sex, disability, race, and gender reassignment.
Guidance for Service Providers
The code is designed to assist businesses and organizations, including leisure centers and hospitals, in adhering to equality law, particularly concerning the provision of single and separate-sex services. It suggests that in limited circumstances, it may be permissible to inquire about an individual’s sex, provided it is handled with utmost sensitivity and respect for privacy.
Parliamentary Scrutiny Period
The code, intended for application across England, Scotland, and Wales, was presented to Parliament on May 21st. It is subject to a 40-day period of consideration by both the House of Commons and the House of Lords. While not requiring a vote for enactment, either chamber has the authority to pass a motion rejecting the code within this timeframe.
Calls for Legislative Action
Nadia Whittome has urged the government to withdraw the current guidance. Instead, she advocates for new legislation to clearly define and safeguard the rights, privacy, and inclusion of transgender individuals. Whittome has expressed concerns that the EHRC code represents a significant regression of rights, with direct consequences for transgender people and a potential erosion of the fundamental principles of inclusion, dignity, and equality.

