The Sunday Telegraph

Civil servants launch campaign against ‘transition twaddle’

- By Ewan Somerville

‘It’s important not to confuse sex with gender identity as that undermines our ability to protect everyone’s rights’

CIVIL servants have launched an employee forum to “fight back” against groupthink and defend binary biological sex, The Sunday Telegraph can disclose.

The cross-government Sex Equality and Equity Network (SEEN) is open to all public sector staff in the UK.

It was started by civil servants last week to “re-focus attention” among officials on furthering sex-based rights by reaffirmin­g sex as immutable.

It is the first time mandarins have organised to defend gender-critical beliefs, following controvers­ies around Whitehall diversity training. Last year, staff in some Government department­s were shown a “Genderbrea­d Person” diagram that claimed sex and gender sit on spectrums of zero to 100.

And earlier this year, other officials were schooled in unlimited gender identities using a “diversity iceberg” model and told to imagine a “Japanese gay grandfathe­r” in a workshop.

SEEN said it was needed because “we all need to be able to talk openly and clearly about sex-based rights using clear language” to improve equity between men and women.

“In recent years, confusion has arisen between sex and the concept of gender identity. Some people have a personal sense of identity as male, female or neither, which they call gender identity,” SEEN said.

“We think it’s important not to confuse sex with gender identity because confusion undermines our ability to protect everyone’s rights.”

The move was welcomed last night by government insiders.

A Whitehall source said: “‘Whether it is introducin­g pronouns, building ‘universal’ toilets or referring to ‘chestfeedi­ng’, the assault on women in the civil service is now facing pushback.

“This network is a sign to mandarins that if they try to erase women, women will fight back.”

The Cabinet Office confirmed that SEEN has been authorised as an official employee network, joining about 20 other forums on issues such as LGBT+, disability, flexible working and race.

One mandarin broke ranks earlier this year to tell this newspaper that Civil Service HR chiefs recognise more than 100 self-identified genders for official personnel records.

Meanwhile, a:gender, another employee network n Whitehall, is open to members who self-identify as transgende­r, transsexua­l, non-binary, gender fluid, genderquee­r, gender variant, cross-dresser, genderless, third gender or bigender, and intersex.

It has ran inclusion workshops for Civil Service staff and says it wants officials to go beyond current equality legislatio­n and use “appropriat­e language/ names/pronouns” and “challenge inappropri­ate language or behaviours”.

SEEN says it “believes in fairness, tolerance and pluralism” with other staff networks, backed by the Civil Service diversity and inclusion strategy, and “wants to avoid and challenge groupthink”.

The Telegraph understand­s that SEEN has already amassed multiple members.

One member, who has joined from the HMRC, said they were “sick of the gender and trans twaddle”, while another said the group was months in the making and “here to stay”.

Concerns about civil servants spending hours sitting through diversity courses prompted Jacob Rees-Mogg to axe more than 250 “woke” courses in September, when he was Cabinet Office minister.

Mr Rees-Mogg claimed some sessions were “indoctrina­ting” civil servants with “divisive ideologica­l agendas”.

A government spokesman said: “All staff networks are voluntary. Civil Service employee networks provide support and practical guidance to staff.”

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