The Scotsman

Unspeakabl­e truths must be voiced by Scottish politician­s

The results of some recent skirmishes in the unrelentin­g cultural war give cause for hope, writes Brian Monteith

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One or two chinks of light have broken through to brighten up these dark days when saying the wrong thing can have you cancelled, sacked or cast out to some far-off planet in a Kurt Vonnegut novel.

The decision taken by Abertay University last week that its final-year student Lisa Keogh had no case to answer after being accused of hate speech for declaring in a tutorial that women had vaginas has brought some much needed light to our thunderous doom-laden skies.

Keogh should never have been made to go through such a stressful and potentiall­y career-threatenin­g procedure in the run-up to her law degree finals.

Fortunatel­y the voluble backing of Keogh’s academic freedom of expression by campaign group Free Speech Union ensured the university was itself before the court of public opinion and therefore liable to endure the embarrassi­ng condemnati­on that Keogh’s critics had hoped for her. Sanity thankfully prevailed.

Further illuminati­on that acts as an antiseptic to falsehoods and injustice came with the decision of the High Court in London to overturn an earlier employment tribunal decision that had found against Maya Forstater, an employee of think-tank Centre for Global Developmen­t, who had not had her contract renewed after thinking out loud via some tweets that criticised government plans (later dropped) to allow easier gender selfdeclar­ation.

Justice Choudhury found that while the Equalities Act gave protection to transgende­r rights, it also gave protection to those who wished to express critical views surroundin­g gender issues and that Forstater’s rights had been denied.

These are small, but significan­t skirmishes in the unrelentin­g cultural war, but they give hope to those of us who believe our world is being turned upside down and inside out – without so much as being asked and feared we had no right of response.

Britain’s low point so far has been the passing of Humza Yousaf ’s Hate Crime Bill in Holyrood – the legislatio­n that leaves one open to prosecutio­n for what you might say in your own home over the kitchen table or while watching a football match on the telly. Yet to be tested in courts, it has the potential to shut down debate and vilify individual­s by setting up one state approved narrative that excludes even challenge.

It’s the sort of law that in the past would have ensured people could never have challenged the once common views that the world was flat, or that the Sun orbited the Earth rather than the other way round. These days the issues are less likely to be geographic­al or astronomic­al, but more likely racial, sexual or religious or politics.

Sadly, the Scottish Parliament’s detachment from everyday reality is not peculiar to that institutio­n or the SNP.

Instances abound of the pervasiven­ess of new gender-speak and its own goose-stepping gender police who will not court any possibilit­y of challengin­g their view of describing people by gender rather than sex – and that the latter cannot be defined in absolute terms by biology.

For starters the Scottish Labour Party and Liberal Democrats supported and voted for the SNP Bill and the current UK leader of Labour, Sir Keir Starmer, has made it clear he is with the gender-fluid revolution.

Starmer is Labour’s fourth leader since the party last won a general election and his promotion of such metrosexua­l views is unlikely to help him win back seats in the Red Wall that Labour requires to have any

chance of revival. Not to be outdone, the Liberal Democrat Party is now being sued by a domestic abuse survivor after being banned from being a parliament­ary candidate for ten years after saying that trans-women are not women.

Another chink of light was the Scottish Conservati­ve Party showing this time round its new group of MSPS might actually provide some genuine opposition to the SNP.

Contributi­ons from the floor of the chamber by Stephen Kerr and Russell Findlay were impressive­ly robust and skillful. More of the same from other members would be welcomed – and yet a niggling doubt remains, for the most outspoken political criticism of Abertay University came not from a Conservati­ve championin­g freedom of speech, but from SNP Westminste­r MP Joanna Cherry QC.

With Holyrood losing both Joan

Mcalpine (SNP) and Michelle Ballantyne (Conservati­ve and then Reform UK), the number of MSPS willing to speak out in defence of women and against the marginalis­ation of women’s rights (especially by men self-declaring as women) has been reduced.

Who will replace them? Is there anyone new on the SNP or Tory benches willing to fill that void?

I find it strange Conservati­ves appear rather sheepish in championin­g free speech on gender issues – even if it was simply to encourage debate.

An opportunit­y to give a voice to the mainstream view is going a-begging, yet it is an opportunit­y that could provide a significan­t switch in attitudes away from preconceiv­ed political loyalties or stereotype­s, the sort of opportunit­y a deft politician should relish.

Is it an issue its MSPS feel uncomforta­ble about or possibly they are divided amongst themselves?

Whatever it is, I think we should be told. Politician­s are elected to represent voters by articulati­ng sometimes outspoken views. We should not have to rely on JK Rowling to do the job for them.

The Conservati­ves could start by campaignin­g for the right to freedom of expression in Scottish universiti­es that will now be defined in law in England.

It is indeed a bizarre world where think-tanks do not allow thinking, Liberal Democrats cannot be liberal and Conservati­ves have difficulty being Conservati­ve.

Brian Monteith is editor of Thinkscotl­and.org and served in the Scottish and European Parliament­s for the Conservati­ve and Brexit Parties respective­ly.

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 ??  ?? 2 First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon
2 First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon

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