The Mail on Sunday

Census to let you choose your sex

Experts new trans-friendly warn that guidelines could wreck crucial plans for the UK’s future

- By Sanchez Manning SOCIAL AFFAIRS CORRESPOND­ENT

‘If people could just pick a race, we’d be up in arms’

PEOPLE filling in the national census are to be told officially t hat t hey can say t heir sex is different from the one on their birth certificat­e.

The new guidance runs the risk of affecting vital data regarding the population the Government needs to plan for the future.

The advice for England and Wales is set to come in from the next census, to be held in 2021.

Transgende­r people will be told that when asked in the survey if they are ‘male’ or ‘female’ they can choose whichever option they feel best describes their sex.

The advice will apply to both adults and children, with parents being able to choose to record a sex for their child that differs from the one on their birth certificat­e.

It will also be applicable to individual­s who are ‘ non- binary’, meaning they do not identify as either men or women, and people who have both male and female sex characteri­stics – known commonly as ‘intersex’.

The move by t he Office for National Statistics is a departure from the last census where no such written guidelines were provided and typically people would opt for the sex they were born.

It reflects a growing trend among public bodies such as the NHS, prisons and schools to allow individual­s to erase their biological sex from official records and register as the gender they feel they are – even if they have not undergone any physical changes.

The guidance is set to accompany census questions when for the first time they are sent out electronic­ally rather than in the post to 26 million households in March 2021.

An ‘informatio­n paper’ published by the ONS this month revealed that the compulsory question which is likely to be posed is ‘What is your sex?’. The response options – as has been the case in previous censuses – will be ‘male’ or ‘female’.

But in its advice on answering this question, an accompanyi­ng statement says: ‘If you are one or more of non-binary, transgende­r, have variations of sex characteri­stics, sometimes also known as intersex, the answer you give can be different from what is on your birth certificat­e. If you’re not sure how to answer, use the sex registered on your official documents, such as passport or driving licence, or whichever describes your sex.’

Last night, legal and medical experts warned that failing to accurately record the numbers of females and males in the population could lead the Government to misallocat­e funds for vital services.

NHS paediatric­ian Dr Julie Maxwell said: ‘Almost every kind of illness behaves differentl­y in men and women. If the national statistics are skewed in this way so you don’t know how many biological men or women there are, and if you add on to that the fact people are already changing their sex on medical records, you lose any meaningful knowledge of how often health problems are happening in men and women.

‘And my biggest fear for children is they are not going to get appropriat­e health services allocated for their needs because of messing around with statistics.’

Professor Rosa Freedman, an expert on LGBT human rights law, added: ‘To understand how ludicrous this is – if people could just pick a race or disability, we would all be up in arms.

‘The purpose of the census is to understand what the population is and plan for those demographi­cs. The census is not there to validate someone’s gender identity. The census is there to allow the Government to plan for the next ten years in terms of its funding for programmes and where it should focus its resources. Conflating gender with sex as the ONS are doing with this guidance does not allow for population planning.’

The next census is also set to ask adults over 16 an additional ‘voluntary’ question on whether their gender is the same as the sex they were registered at birth for the first time. If the answer to this question is ‘no’ they are given the option to enter a term they use to describe their gender. The ONS said it was advised by a number of transgende­r lobby groups in devising this question on gender such as Mermaids, which supports young people, but also consulted potential objectors such as feminists.

It insisted that while there has never been written guidance for tr ans gender people on how to answer the question on sex, there had been no change in their advice. A spokesman said if a trans person called one of their advisers on how to answer this section in the last 2011 census, they would have been verbally told to select the sex they believed was correct for them.

Mermaids also advised ITV in the making of a series on transgende­r children called Butterfly – a drama last year in which Anna Friel played a mother who supports her 11-year-old son to begin living as a girl called Maxine.

 ??  ?? TRANS DRAMA: Anna Friel, above, playing a mum who helps her son live as a girl and, left, how the next census will tackle the question of gender
TRANS DRAMA: Anna Friel, above, playing a mum who helps her son live as a girl and, left, how the next census will tackle the question of gender
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