logo
Labour's pick for equalities chair backs gender-critical feminists

Labour's pick for equalities chair backs gender-critical feminists

Telegraph01-07-2025
Labour's choice to be the next chairman of the equalities watchdog has championed the right of women who oppose gender ideology to speak out.
Dr Mary-Ann Stephenson said 'freedom of expression' was very important to her, as she spoke out against women being 'harassed or sacked from their jobs for peaceful expression of legally protected beliefs'.
Appearing before MPs and peers, she criticised trans rights activists' attempts to 'no platform' women's rights groups as part of their 'attempts to close down debate'.
Dr Stephenson, the director of the Women's Budget Group, is the Government's pick to lead the Equality and Human Rights Commission when Baroness Falkner, the incumbent, steps down later this year.
'Attempts to close down debate'
But supporters of trans rights have criticised the choice, accusing her of having attended women's rights conferences at which gender-critical views were aired.
On Tuesday she was challenged at a joint meeting of the Lords and Commons' equalities committees over her decision to sign a letter calling for open, non-violent discussion on gender issues, a letter which some activists have described as transphobic.
'They were about my opposition to practices of no platforming and attempts to close down debate,' she said.
'I started my professional career at Article 19 which is an international human rights organisation which focuses on freedom of expression. It's a really important value to me.
'I don't think freedom of expression should be an absolute value but it should be restricted in very limited circumstances, and I think that attempts to close down debate in any area is generally a mistake.
'To be honest I think that had we been able to have better dialogue on some of these issues 10 years ago we might be in a better position than we are in now.'
Employment tribunal
Dr Stephenson defended her decision to donate to a lawyer who was discriminated against at work for opposing trans self-ID.
She also donated £25 to the legal fund of Allison Bailey, a barrister who took her chambers to court after they asked her to remove two gender-critical tweets. An employment tribunal found she had been discriminated against after clerks gave her less work to do.
'The donation was very specifically because I was upset at seeing women being harassed or sacked from their jobs for peaceful expression of legally protected beliefs,' she said.
Dr Stephenson added: 'The debate has been so toxic that people just stepped away… so you end up with discussions taking place on social media.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Homeowners could pay new property tax instead of stamp duty
Homeowners could pay new property tax instead of stamp duty

Times

time22 minutes ago

  • Times

Homeowners could pay new property tax instead of stamp duty

Homeowners with properties worth more than £500,000 could have to pay annual property taxes under radical plans to replace stamp duty. The Treasury is reportedly considering a proportional property tax in the budget this autumn, according to The Guardian. Rather than paying stamp duty (which ranges from 2 per cent on the purchase price between £125,000 and £250,000, through to 12 per cent on the portion of the price above £1.5 million) anyone buying a home worth more than £500,000 would face an annual tax. For years there have been calls to overhaul stamp duty, which raised £13.8 billion for the Treasury in the 2024-25 tax year but has been criticised for putting homeowners off moving. There are no firm details to the proposal, but it was reported that the Treasury was looking at suggestions from the centre-right think tank Onward, which would involve homeowners with properties worth more than £500,000 paying a 0.54 per cent annual tax on any value above £500,000. Professor Tim Leunig from the London School of Economics, who came up with the proposals last August, said: 'The way Britain taxes households is both impractical and unfair. Stamp duty raises transaction costs, preventing people from moving for new job opportunities, and undermines growth.' Any home worth more than £1 million would pay 0.81 per cent on the portion of its value over that threshold. Onward's proposals were that the new tax would not be applied retrospectively but would be paid by anyone who bought a home after it was introduced. The 5 per cent stamp duty surcharge for additional homes would remain and those owners would not pay annual levies. Leunig also proposed scrapping council tax and replacing it with a 0.44 per cent annual property tax levied by local authorities on house value between £800 and £500,000 (a maximum of £2,196 a year). Then you would pay 0.54 per cent on the portion above £500,000 to the government, instead of stamp duty. Someone with a £650,000 home would pay £3,006 a year — 0.44 per cent of £499,200 (the maximum £2,196) to their council and then another £810 a year to the government. • Read more money advice and tips on investing from our experts Treasury officials are reportedly considering a local property tax 'in the medium term' according to the Guardian, while replacing stamp duty could come earlier. The campaign group Fairer Share is calling for the abolition of stamp duty and council tax and for them to be replaced with a flat 0.48 per cent annual property tax. Andrew Dixon from Fairer Share said the reported plans would be a 'step in the right direction'. 'We look forward to working closely with the government to deliver long-overdue reform — creating a modern property tax system that supports local services, reflects real property values, and shares the burden more fairly across homeowners,' he said. The Times reported in May that 83 per cent of homeowners in England would pay less under a 0.48 per cent annual property tax than they did under the council tax system. The biggest losers would be those in London and the south east according to the estate agency Hamptons. House prices in those areas have gone up the most since April 1991, when council tax bands were set based on property values. Dixon said: 'By taxing property transactions, stamp duty discourages homeowners from moving — be it an older couple downsizing or a growing family upsizing. Removing it would lead to a more effective use of housing.' Some 85 per cent of homeowners in England and Wales were 'under-occupiers' with one or more spare bedrooms, according to a survey of more than 4,300 by Barclays. Of those, 73 per cent were over 45, and 37 per cent were over 65. The proportion of homebuyers who were 45 or older has fallen from 45 per cent in the 2015-16 tax year to 39 per cent in 2023-24, according to the estate agency Savills. Some 41 per cent of 2,000 homeowners aged over 55 polled by the estate agency Jackson-Stops said they would downsize within two years if stamp duty was reduced or removed. David Fell from Hamptons said: 'Who is better off will come down to how closely the government chooses to follow any recommendations. But I think in response to the general principle, the shift would probably cut the cost of buying the most expensive homes, but add to the annual cost of ownership, particularly given the artificially low levels of council tax charged by many places that have the most expensive house prices. 'The impact of a change to the system would probably depend on the level at which the rates were set, and the length of time it takes for the higher ownership charges to outweigh existing stamp duty and council tax bills.' The Treasury said it did not comment on speculation about the budget.

Starmer a ‘patriot' who backs flying the England flag, says Downing Street
Starmer a ‘patriot' who backs flying the England flag, says Downing Street

Telegraph

time42 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Starmer a ‘patriot' who backs flying the England flag, says Downing Street

Sir Keir Starmer is a 'patriot' who backs people flying the England flag, Downing Street has said. The Prime Minister's official spokesman insisted Sir Keir believed that pride in his country was 'an important thing' after two councils vowed to remove English or British flags. Local authorities in Tower Hamlets, east London, and Birmingham have both pledged to remove Union and St George's flags flown from lamp posts during the past fortnight. And on Monday, Reform-led council Worcestershire county council claimed that hanging British flags from lamp posts could put lives at risk. Challenged on the actions of the two councils, the Prime Minister's official spokesman said: 'I haven't asked him about specific cases of specific councils. 'But what the Prime Minister has always talked about is pride in being British, his patriotism in that – not least with the Lionesses in the Euros – and patriotism will always be an important thing to him.' The spokesman was then asked whether Sir Keir thought people should put up English and British flags, and replied: 'Absolutely. Patriotism, putting up English flags… We put up English flags all around Downing Street every time the English football team, the women's and men's, are around.' Downing Street went on to emphasise that the Prime Minister was not familiar with events in Birmingham or Tower Hamlets, adding: 'It's a matter for those councils. But when it comes to the PM being a patriot, he's been clear it's important to him in the past. 'The PM's always been clear about his pride in Britain, reflected in the fact we often have the St George's flag, and other flags, flying in Downing Street.' On Monday, Worcestershire county council became the third to express opposition to the flags when a spokesman said St George and Union flags hung from lamp posts in Wythall, a village south of Birmingham, risked endangering pedestrians and motorists. The spokesman told The Telegraph that 'lamp columns on the highway should not have anything attached to them' without its consent. 'This is to ensure that work can be carried out as quickly and safely as possible to the columns, that no damage is caused which could cost money to repair, that visibility isn't affected and no electrical hazards are caused,' the spokesman said. 'Those attaching anything to lamp columns could also be putting their own lives at risk, as well as those of passers-by and motorists.' The remarks drew a furious reaction from Cllr Jo Monk, the council's leader, who said she supported flying flags from lamp posts. 'In Worcestershire, we are proud of our English and British identities,' she said. 'I of course support flying both flags proudly on lamp posts throughout the county. Our national flags are a symbol of our national pride, and I will champion any effort that celebrates our nation.' Nigel Farage, the Reform leader, said it was 'not true' that the council would take down the flags. He said: 'A council press officer did this without authority. Radical reform of local government is needed.' Jacob Young, who is behind the flag campaign in Wythall, said he wanted to 'cover every street' in the village 'with our beautiful St George's cross'. But other local residents have been filmed taking down some of the flags. 'You're always going to get the odd few out of thousands in every community which in this case are calling it racist and taking it upon themselves to take the flags down,' said Mr Young. 'This is not racist, never has been, never will be. We have members of the community of all ethnicities and religions stopping by and praising what we are doing, so please don't call this racist. We are just patriotic and should be flying our beautiful flag.' The remarks came after Tower Hamlets, run by the pro-Gaza party Aspire, said it would remove any St George's flags from council property, including lamp posts, 'as soon as possible'. The flags were put up in the borough as part of an online 'patriotism campaign' called Operation Raise the Colours. In Birmingham, the Labour-run council – which declared effective bankruptcy in 2023 and has been grappling with bin strikes for more than five months – claimed the flags put the lives of pedestrians and motorists 'at risk'. But the campaign in the West Midlands city has continued, and on Monday it emerged that six mini-roundabouts had been daubed with red paint to look like St George's flags. Critics have accused the two councils of 'two-tier bias' because Palestinian flags were not taken down for months after popping up in the aftermath of the start of the Israel-Hamas war. British and English flags have also been hoisted on streets across England, including in Swindon, Bradford, Newcastle and Norwich. Government guidance published in 2021 states: 'Flags are a very British way of expressing joy and pride. The government wants to see more flags flown, particularly the Union flag.' The guidance warns, however, that flags must not 'obscure or hinder the interpretation of official road, rail, waterway or aircraft signs, or otherwise make hazardous the use of these types of transport'.

Reform UK deputy Leicestershire County Council leader removed
Reform UK deputy Leicestershire County Council leader removed

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

Reform UK deputy Leicestershire County Council leader removed

The deputy leader of Leicestershire County Council has been removed from the role after three months in the UK's Joseph Boam has also been removed from position as cabinet member for adult social care, with a party source saying he would now be taking on an unspecified "new role".The 22-year-old was one of 25 Reform councillors elected to the authority in May's local on social media on Sunday, Boam said: "Despite the recent news, nothing's changed, I'll keep fighting for Whitwick at County Hall and doing everything I can to help get a Reform UK government and Nigel Farage as our next prime minister." County council leader Dan Harrison told the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) he would not comment on the matter until after the Reform group had met later this to the LDRS, Boam previously said: "I haven't stepped down from any role. I am no longer deputy leader or in cabinet. But have been offered a cabinet support role which I'm inclined to take." After winning 25 of the 55 seats on the council, Reform took control from the Conservatives to form a minority administration.A Reform UK source added: "Joseph deserves thanks for his role in helping to establish the Reform group at Leicestershire County Council and we wish him well, as he moves into a new role, where he will continue to support the group's efforts at County Hall."The Leicestershire Conservative group - the main opposition on the authority - has now branded Reform UK's local leadership a "shambles". Their leader Deborah Taylor said it was "no surprise" to her Boam "has been shown the door after just three months".She added: "He was wholly unqualified for such a critical role and lacked the experience or judgement to bring anything of value to the position. "Those of us who have led this council know that it takes at least six to 12 months for even the most capable new councillor to properly learn their portfolio, and that's with the benefit of mentoring from seasoned colleagues."A new deputy leader and cabinet member for adult social care is expected to appointed in due course.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store