The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Labour MP: J.K. Rowling exploited sex attack ordeal

- By Glen Owen and James Heale

SIR KEIR Starmer was facing a fresh challenge to Labour discipline last night after one of his frontbench­ers accused J.K. Rowling of exploiting her sex attack ordeal.

Lloyd Russell-Moyle, a Shadow Environmen­t Minister, claimed the author was ‘using her own sexual assault’ to justify her views on transgende­r issues.

The Left-winger’s comment outraged feminists in the party and they are now demanding that Sir Keir axe him in the same way that he sacked Shadow Education Minister Rebecca Long Bailey for forwarding a tweet that made false claims about Israel.

Mr Russell-Moyle, the MP for Kemptown and Peacehaven, is an outspoken advocate of trans rights and a leading member of the Socialist Campaign Group of MPs, who are in uproar over Mrs Long Bailey’s dramatic dismissal.

Ms Rowling has found herself the subject of vicious trolling and accusation­s of being transphobi­c after responding to a headline on an online article discussing ‘people who menstruate’. In a tweet, she said: ‘I’m sure there used to be a word for those people. Someone help me out. Wumben? Wimpund? Woomud?’

Stung by criticism, the writer – whose Harry Potter books have sold more than 500million copies worldwide – sought to justify her decision to speak out in a deeply personal essay.

Recalling how the trauma of ‘a serious sexual assault I suffered in my twenties’ had informed her thinking about the trans issue and women’s rights, Ms Rowling explained: ‘Like every other domestic abuse and sexual assault survivor I know, I feel nothing but empathy and solidarity with trans women who’ve been abused by men.’

But in an article published last week in the Left-wing Tribune magazine, Mr Russell-Moyle accused Ms Rowling of promoting ‘hate’ towards trans people and of exploiting the sexual assault she had endured.

‘Recently, of course, we saw people like J.K. Rowling using her own sexual assault as justificat­ion for discrimina­ting against a group of people who were not responsibl­e for it,’ he wrote. His words brought swift condemnati­on by women’s rights campaigner­s in the Labour Party. ‘This is victimblam­ing and it’s disgracefu­l,’ said one. ‘It’s worse than anything [Long Bailey] did and he should be out. This man is accusing a woman who suffered a violent crime of exploiting her own sexual assault. It’s horrible and it’s sexist and Keir can’t let it stand.’

Helen Saxby, of campaign group Woman’s Place UK, added: ‘I hope Labour are going to be more intelligen­t than this over an issue which affects women’s rights, not just trans people.’

Despite previous lapses, Mr Russell-Moyle has retained his environmen­t brief under Sir Keir. In April, The Mail on Sunday revealed a video in which the 33year-old MP accused the Conservati­ve Government of ‘conspiring to murder’ British citizens.

The Labour leader has been anxious to steer clear of trans issues, a contentiou­s subject in his party. During the leadership contest, he was the only candidate who refused to sign a public pledge demanding that ‘transphobi­c’ feminists be expelled, and his spokesman condemned the abuse directed at Ms Rowling.

The Government is preparing to abandon Theresa May’s controvers­ial plans to allow men to ‘selfidenti­fy’ as women. Strategist­s believe it could create clear blue water with Sir Keir if Labour chooses to endorse reforms to the Gender Recognitio­n Act.

Labour did not respond to requests for comment last night.

 ??  ?? CONTROVERS­IAL COMMENTS: Left-winger Lloyd Russell-Moyle
CONTROVERS­IAL COMMENTS: Left-winger Lloyd Russell-Moyle

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