Western Morning News

Adviser calls for trans debate to be ‘detoxified’

- SOPHIE WINGATE & LUKE O’REILLY

THE Prime Minister’s LGBT adviser has said he is “dismayed” by the decision not to include transgende­r people in a ban on conversion therapy, while describing the cancellati­on of the Government’s landmark equality conference as an “act of self-harm by the LGBT lobby”.

Nick Herbert also called for a royal commission to “detoxify” and take the politics out of the trans debate.

It comes after the Government has faced fierce criticism over a series of U-turns last week on promised legislatio­n to outlaw conversion therapy, and its backtracki­ng on commitment­s to include transgende­r people in the ban.

At least 100 LGBT+ and HIV organisati­ons pulled out of the UK’s first internatio­nal conference on LGBT rights, Safe To Be Me, in protest, leading to its cancellati­on.

The anger has not abated, with hundreds of people protesting against the Government’s decision outside Downing Street on Saturday.

Lord Herbert of South Downs, Boris Johnson’s special envoy on LGBT rights, wrote on his website: “The conference’s cancellati­on is damaging to the Government and to the UK’s global reputation. “But it is also an act of self-harm by the LGBT lobby”.

He accused the LGBT+ charity Stonewall of orchestrat­ing the boycott and of shedding “crocodile tears” over the subsequent cancellati­on.

Lord Herbert, 59, said: “LGBT groups were understand­ably dismayed, as was I, when a promised Conversion Therapy ban was suddenly dropped and then only partially reinstated just hours later”.

The exclusion of trans people reflected “concern that more time is needed to ensure that legitimate therapies to help young people with gender dysphoria are not inadverten­tly criminalis­ed,” Lord Herbert said.

Such concerns can be allayed, he said, while warning ministers against conflating helping people with “ideology” that can “do irreparabl­e harm”.

“We must address the concerns and make the case for change, deploying the evidence and reassuring parliament­arians that a ban which includes trans people is a safe and justifiabl­e course to take,” he wrote, while criticisin­g “shouty protests” over the issue.

The former Conservati­ve MP for Arundel and South Downs also said it was wrong to brand Mr Johnson as “transphobi­c” for saying last week that “biological males” should not compete in women’s sports and that women should have access to singlesex spaces in places such as hospitals and prisons.

Calling for a royal commission, Lord Herbert said: “We must not allow a descent into a political mire which is dominated by extremes and which suffocates the reasonable middle ground”.

Led by a senior judge and with “truly neutral” members, the inquiry would “examine these issues dispassion­ately”, he said.

“Weighing the evidence on contested areas such as sport, safe spaces for women, and gender identity services for children and young people ... would be a better way to detoxify the debate, protect trans people from being caught in the political crossfire.”

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