Yorkshire Post

LGBT+ campaigner­s reflect on the past and look forward

Talks

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WHILE LGBT+ History Month is an opportunit­y to look back at key moments in the fight for equality and the trailblaze­rs who have come before, it’s also a chance to look forward.

The news cycle might paint quite a bleak picture of life in the LGBT+ community – particular­ly with recorded homophobic and transphobi­c hate crimes on the rise – but Nancy Kelley, chief executive of Stonewall feels positive about the future.

“It’s my job to feel hopeful,” she says simply. “It’s my job to make sure to fight with others in the movement to make sure we get a positive outcome.”

Kelley adds: “It’s really relevant to LGBT History Month actually – I think a lot about Michael Cashman (one of the founders of Stonewall), Lisa Power (activist), Ian McKellen – I think about what they lived through, and what they did. I think about all the LGBTQ people that came before me, whose names we don’t know, because they weren’t famous activists – they were just incredibly brave people going about their daily lives, and insisting other citizens see them and recognise them as they are. I think about how much they were able to change, and that gives me enormous hope – not that we will win all the fights now, but that we will win all of the fights eventually… And we can all be part of making that happen.”

Kelley feels particular­ly positive when she considers how much has changed in her own lifetime – allowing her to now be married to a woman, and be an adopter – making her “think about the potential for change in the future for the lifetime of my children”.

But there are two particular issues she feels particular­ly hopeful will change in the near future.

The first is conversion therapy. “Conversion therapy, or so-called conversion therapy, are practices that are trying to change or suppress who we are at the basic level,” explains Kelley. “So they’re trying to make lesbian, gay, bi, ace (asexual) people’s sexual orientatio­n change, they’re designed to make trans people’s gender identity change.”

Kelley says conversion therapy doesn’t work, “because these are really fundamenta­l parts of who we are, and there’s a lot of evidence that they cause very significan­t long-term psychologi­cal harm”. Stonewall’s CEO indicates there’s “a broader social value” to banning conversion therapy, because it “supports and underlines the idea that there’s something wrong with who we are – we’re beautiful just as we are”.

Kelley feels hopeful the UK government will implement a full ban soon, because “globally there is a campaign to end the abuse of conversion therapy gathering incredible pace”.

For Kelley, it’s important legislatio­n “doesn’t leave loopholes that allow for these really horrific abuses to continue” – giving the example of adults being able to ‘consent’ to conversion therapy as a potentiall­y damaging caveat.

The second issue is unequal access to fertility treatment on the NHS

Kelley calls this “one of those areas of inequality that a lot of people don’t know exists – and unfortunat­ely, when people discover it is often when it’s directly harming them”.

In England, access to fertility treatments differs depending on where you live, as NHS funding allocation is decided by local clinical commission­ing groups (CCGs).

For same-sex couples who want to have fertility treatment, many find they face the additional hurdle of having to privately pay for three to 12 rounds of IUI (intrauteri­ne inseminati­on, which has a lower success rate than IVF) before being offered one round of IVF on the NHS. “What that means, in effect, is only wealthy couples can access NHS IVF,” explains Kelley. “And this is just wrong… It shouldn’t be the case that money is a barrier to becoming a parent.”

Prudence Wade to Stonewall CEO Nancy Kelley about conversion therapy and access to IVF on the NHS, as campaigner­s mark LGBT+ History Month.

 ?? PICTURE: PA WIRE ?? NANCY KELLEY: The Stonewall chief executive talks about conversion therapy and IVF.
PICTURE: PA WIRE NANCY KELLEY: The Stonewall chief executive talks about conversion therapy and IVF.

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