The Daily Telegraph

No conference for Labour MP branded online as ‘transphobi­c’

Rosie Duffield, who was threatened after saying ‘only women have a cervix’, has decided to stay away

- By Danielle Sheridan POLITICAL CORRESPOND­ENT

A LABOUR MP has been forced to pull out of next week’s party conference over her transgende­r views after extremists threatened her.

Rosie Duffield, MP for Canterbury, will not attend the conference in Brighton after receiving online threats.

Ms Duffield, 50, said she was branded transphobi­c after she said “that only women have a cervix”.

She told The Sunday Times: “We have had Labour MPS who have had to have security at conference over the past few years, and I didn’t want that sort of attention or to become the story. I just thought it was better for everyone if I quietly stayed away.”

She added: “LGBT+ Labour now seem to hate my guts and I feared they’d have a massive go at me at conference.

“The people who threaten me I don’t think are actually likely to harm me. They just say it often and very loudly.”

Ms Duffield also said that she believed some of the people who attack her online are “straight white men”.

She said: “There are some women who get involved and want to be seen to be very woke ... but mostly it is men, and the same men that have trolled me ever since I got elected.

“So it looks like, feels like, and smells like misogyny, and this is just the latest cause they have latched on to. The fact that I am blonde they call me a bimbo. The fact that I don’t like anti-semitism.

There is always something, but it is always the same people who attack me.”

Ms Duffield said she was “exhausted” and had felt “frightened” by the abuse and has discussed her security with Sir Lindsay Hoyle, the Speaker of the House of Commons, Sir Alan Campbell, the Labour chief whip and Kent police.

She added: “For the first time in my life, having been an ambassador for a gender-balanced 50:50 parliament, I would hesitate to encourage other women to come into politics.

“I would have to really think about what I was asking them to do, and putting people into this position when they are going to be on the front line of some pretty s **** y abuse.”

Sir Lindsay intervened on the matter with a statement which said: “Parliament­arians, who have been elected to speak up for their constituen­ts, should be able to attend their own party conference without fear of harm.

“It is why we chose to discuss the security of MPS, their staff, journalist­s and other public figures at our G7 Speakers’ conference this weekend, because too many people have been targeted for their opinion or the office they hold.” Sir Lindsay said that to “protect democracy” the Government needed to “ensure those participat­ing can do so without threats of intimidati­on”.

Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London, said it was “unacceptab­le that anybody feels unsafe” going to the conference.

When asked on The Andrew Marr Show whether “someone who thinks that only women have a cervix” is welcome at conference, Mr Khan said: “They are. One of the things about the Labour Party is it’s a chance to debate, discuss, have disagreeme­nt in a respect- ful way.” However, when Sir Ed Davey, the leader of the Liberal Democrats, was asked on the same show what was wrong with the phrase “woman – adult human female”, relating to Natalie Bird, 40, who was this year banned from standing as a Lib Dem candidate for 10 years because she wore a T-shirt with that phrase on it.

Sir Ed was unable to answer the question, despite being asked numerous times.

 ??  ?? Rosie Duffield says most of her attackers are ‘straight white men’ – or women who want to be seen as very woke
Rosie Duffield says most of her attackers are ‘straight white men’ – or women who want to be seen as very woke

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