logo
#

Latest news with #JennyMarcroft

Wellington Queer Communities Protest Against NZ First's Anti-Trans Bill
Wellington Queer Communities Protest Against NZ First's Anti-Trans Bill

Scoop

time10-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Scoop

Wellington Queer Communities Protest Against NZ First's Anti-Trans Bill

Press Release – Queer Endurance in Defiance Now more than ever, trans communities need support. Join Queer Endurance in Defiance, or your local queer organisation, and help us demonstrate that we will not be defined out of existence. On Saturday 8 May, around 400 protesters rallied with Queer Endurance in Defiance (QED), protesting against a proposed member's bill by NZ First MP Jenny Marcroft, which aims to legally exclude trans people from definitions of 'man' and 'woman.' NZ First leader Winston Peters announced on 22 April that the bill will define a woman as an 'adult human biological female' and a man as an 'adult human biological male.' The wording of the bill reflects that of a recent ruling from Britain's Supreme Court, which similarly excluded trans women from the definition of women. QED activists say both moves seek to facilitate the exclusion of trans people from social services and public life. QED spokesperson Tristan-Cordelia Egarr noted that the government had already indicated moves to restrict access to puberty blockers for trans rangatahi, and erase queer and trans people from Relationships and Sexuality Education in schools. Egarr also noted that 'instead of focusing on the most pressing issues facing New Zealanders – the cost of living crisis, child poverty, the climate crisis, our overburdened healthcare system – Peters and the government are presenting these transparent attempts to distract and divide us by targeting an already marginalised and vulnerable community.' 'Now more than ever, trans communities need support. Join Queer Endurance in Defiance, or your local queer organisation, and help us demonstrate that we will not be defined out of existence. We trans people will continue to exist, and we will continue to resist.'

Wellington Queer Communities Protest Against NZ First's Anti-Trans Bill
Wellington Queer Communities Protest Against NZ First's Anti-Trans Bill

Scoop

time10-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Scoop

Wellington Queer Communities Protest Against NZ First's Anti-Trans Bill

On Saturday 8 May, around 400 protesters rallied with Queer Endurance in Defiance (QED), protesting against a proposed member's bill by NZ First MP Jenny Marcroft, which aims to legally exclude trans people from definitions of 'man' and 'woman.' NZ First leader Winston Peters announced on 22 April that the bill will define a woman as an 'adult human biological female' and a man as an 'adult human biological male.' The wording of the bill reflects that of a recent ruling from Britain's Supreme Court, which similarly excluded trans women from the definition of women. QED activists say both moves seek to facilitate the exclusion of trans people from social services and public life. QED spokesperson Tristan-Cordelia Egarr noted that the government had already indicated moves to restrict access to puberty blockers for trans rangatahi, and erase queer and trans people from Relationships and Sexuality Education in schools. Egarr also noted that 'instead of focusing on the most pressing issues facing New Zealanders - the cost of living crisis, child poverty, the climate crisis, our overburdened healthcare system - Peters and the government are presenting these transparent attempts to distract and divide us by targeting an already marginalised and vulnerable community.' 'Now more than ever, trans communities need support. Join Queer Endurance in Defiance, or your local queer organisation, and help us demonstrate that we will not be defined out of existence. We trans people will continue to exist, and we will continue to resist.'

NZ First Bill would ‘write trans people out of' law
NZ First Bill would ‘write trans people out of' law

Otago Daily Times

time07-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Otago Daily Times

NZ First Bill would ‘write trans people out of' law

A Saturday protest placed human rights concerns of the rainbow community in the spotlight. Stand Against Transphobia - Fight the Far Right challenged moves to undermine transgender rights. Organised by International Socialists Otepoti Dunedin and Dunedin Pride, the gathering drew about 300 queer and trans members and supporters. Speakers responded to a proposed Member's Bill from New Zealand First MP Jenny Marcroft that would define a woman as an adult human biological female and a man as an adult human biological male. Protest co-ordinator Oscar Bartle said the party's Bill was a blatant attempt to erase trans and non-binary people from law. ''Not only will this result in situations where trans people will be sent to the wrong prisons and other such injustices, it will also serve to legitimise and embolden the transphobic far-right.'' International Socialists Otepoti Dunedin member Neave Ashton said the world had become a much scarier place for trans people in recent years. ''This Bill, if passed, would effectively write trans people out of legal recognition.'' It could mean trans women would be sent to men's prisons where they were up to 13 times more likely to be raped and sexually assaulted. It might result in ''big, burly trans men with full beards'' being forced to use women's toilets, they said. ''It could also mean that our medication, like puberty blockers and gender-affirming care, could be banned or restricted.'' Local drag performer Ann Arkii, a genderqueer transgender man hoping to receive top surgery later this year, said transitioning had been lifesaving. ''I wouldn't be standing in front of you here today if I was unable to live my life the way that I needed to. ''Who I am as a person is not something that can be defined, debated or legislated by the state.'' Bills like this one were mere distractions from bigger problems such as the cost-of-living crisis, climate change, famine and genocide. ''Trans people will not be erased, not from public life, not from history, not now and not ever. A world without trans people is a world without humanity.'' @

NZ First wants to copy the UK in defining ‘woman'. It makes no legal or human sense
NZ First wants to copy the UK in defining ‘woman'. It makes no legal or human sense

The Spinoff

time22-04-2025

  • Politics
  • The Spinoff

NZ First wants to copy the UK in defining ‘woman'. It makes no legal or human sense

In a swift importation of global culture wars, NZ First has introduced a new member's bill. Paul Thistoll explains why it's ill-conceived on a number of levels. Last week, the UK Supreme Court ruled that, for the purposes of the Equality Act, 'woman' means biological woman. The decision, welcomed by anti-trans campaigners around the world, including here in New Zealand, might make sense within Britain's particular statutory framework, but politically, morally, and sociologically — and yes, even scientifically — the ruling is deeply flawed. It also has minimal legal relevance to Aotearoa. Despite that, New Zealand First has this week proposed legislation through a Jenny Marcroft member's bill that would seek to 'protect the term 'woman' in law'. The bill appears to be entirely inspired by the UK decision, and proposes that 'woman' be defined in law as an 'adult human biological female' and 'man' as an 'adult human biological male'. In the UK, the judgement is the latest expression of a global backlash against the inclusion of trans people in public life. But we should be clear-eyed: this ruling cannot be imported into our system without flattening our unique legal, cultural and human rights landscape. A judgement built on exclusion The case concerned the interpretation of the word 'woman' under the UK's Equality Act 2010. In essence, the Court found that the term referred to a biological female, and that a trans woman with a gender recognition certificate could be lawfully excluded from single-sex spaces, such as women's support services. The implications of this decision are significant: it entrenches biological essentialism into the heart of UK anti-discrimination law. Perhaps most tellingly, no trans voices were permitted to intervene in the hearing. The judgement proceeds in a vacuum, disconnected from the people most affected. This absence is not neutral. It helps explain why the Court treated biology as the sole and stable marker of identity. But identity is not reducible to chromosomes. Moreover, the UK system itself is highly different from ours. In the UK, individuals can follow a medicalised, bureaucratic process under the UK Gender Recognition Act 2004 to gain a certificate which states their desired gender. This is in stark contrast to Aotearoa, where sex self-ID is the implemented paradigm (interestingly, it was Tracey Martin of NZ First who shepherded those reforms through parliament). In their haste to get this divisive bill into the biscuit tin, NZ First have given absolutely no thought to how the laws that would rely on this definition would be enforced. As I wrote to Judith Collins last year (on the matter of sports), the regime that NZ First proposes would be entirely unimplementable. It would require compulsory chromosomal testing and the establishment of a sex-passport infrastructure. I wrote: 'They are simply not serious options in a free society… and compulsory chromosomal testing of newborns… could give rise to another parliamentary occupation.' Lex non cogit ad impossibilia – The law does not compel the impossible. Aotearoa has a different human rights framework The UK decision has no binding effect in Aotearoa, and it should have no persuasive authority either. We have a different legislative framework, different institutions and different Treaty obligations. New Zealand's Births, Deaths, Marriages, and Relationships Registration Act 2021 allows individuals to self-identify their sex on their birth certificate without medical intervention. This reflects a recognition that self-identification is consistent with the dignity and autonomy of trans people. It also reflects the understanding that gender identity, not biology, is what matters in ensuring equal access to rights and services. Our courts have already shown a more nuanced understanding of gender in several cases. In Muir v Police, which involved a transgender woman who was stopped and questioned by police for cross-dressing, the High Court acknowledged that a person's gender identity was relevant to how they should be treated in police custody, suggesting our judiciary recognises that gender identity, not just biological sex, has legal significance. Many have argued that our Human Rights Act 1993 should explicitly include gender identity, gender expression, and variations of sex characteristics. But even in its current form, it has been interpreted to include trans people. The Human Rights Commission's chief legal officer, Hannah Northover, recently confirmed to me that the Commission still relies on the 2006 Crown Law advice, which found that discrimination against trans people falls within the existing sex discrimination provisions. We are not Britain. Our legal direction is different by design. Aotearoa has a different social and political context What's often overlooked in these discussions is just how different our social context is from Britain's. We've already had transgender representation at the highest levels of government, with Georgina Beyer making history as the world's first openly transgender MP back in 1999 – more than two decades before the UK elected its first. Our political landscape hasn't been captured by anti-trans bigotry to the same extent as Britain's, as much as one minor party might try. The loudest transphobic voices in our public discourse represent a small minority, and most feminist organisations and leaders in Aotearoa maintain inclusive stances that recognise trans women as women – it's only a particularly vocal fringe that aligns with trans-exclusionary positions. The political reality here also offers structural protections. Any attempt to legislate similar restrictions would face significant obstacles, given the likelihood of coalition governments under MMP and the staunch support of gender diversity from the likes of the Green Party and Te Pāti Māori. Inclusion works. Exclusion harms. The main effect of the UK judgement will be to exclude people with Y chromosomes from female-only spaces. But the safety of those spaces is not derived from chromosomes. In Aotearoa, Women's Refuge is explicitly trans-inclusive. They understand that safety comes from trust, support and shared experience — not from anatomy. Trans women are not a threat to women's safety. That narrative is both false and harmful. There is no evidence that trans inclusion in single-sex spaces leads to harm. But there is overwhelming evidence that exclusion harms trans people: increasing isolation, vulnerability and barriers to essential services. The UK judgement also erases intersex and non-binary people entirely. It offers no space for those whose bodies or identities don't align with binary definitions. It doubles down on a model of sex that is neither inclusive nor scientifically accurate. Rights are grounded in gender, not biology The judgement's essential mistake is to treat biology as the bedrock of human rights. But rights are grounded in how people live, how they are perceived and how they are treated. Gender is what drives discrimination. Gender is what shapes experience. And gender is what must underpin human rights protections. Trans women experience misogyny as women. They are excluded as women. Their safety, dignity, and freedom depend on being recognised as women. If the law fails to protect them on that basis, then it is the law that is failing. The judgement opens the door to a resurgence of biological essentialism — a framework that has been used for centuries to exclude, marginalise, and punish those who do not conform. It is a politics of control masquerading as neutrality. Gender diversity has deep roots in Aotearoa It's also historically inaccurate to treat gender fluidity as some modern or imported concept. In pre-colonial Māori society, gender was understood as more expansive than Western colonial norms. Elizabeth Kerekere's research on takatāpui affirms the presence and value of diverse gender identities within traditional Māori communities. These identities were not only accepted, but integrated into social and cultural life. The imposition of rigid, binary gender norms was a colonial act. To now re-impose those definitions through the back door of the law would be to compound that harm. It would risk breaching Te Tiriti o Waitangi, and would be susceptible to challenge on that basis. Any future attempt to import UK-style reasoning into New Zealand law would need to reckon with these histories and obligations. We deserve better The UK Supreme Court's ruling might make sense within its own narrow legal logic, but it does not make sense here. Aotearoa has a chance to lead with clarity: to affirm that human rights are for all of us, including trans, intersex, and non-binary people, and to reject the idea that biology determines worth. We need to build a legal culture rooted in dignity, autonomy, and inclusion. Should NZ First's member's bill to define 'woman' in strictly biological terms be pulled from the biscuit tin and progress, Peters and his party will have an almighty fight on their hands. Aotearoa is not a country gripped by anti-trans hysteria, no matter how hard some try to import it. Most people here still believe in dignity, decency, and letting others live in peace. We should treat the UK decision as a warning, not a precedent.

New Zealand First proposes legislation to define ‘woman', ‘man' in law
New Zealand First proposes legislation to define ‘woman', ‘man' in law

NZ Herald

time21-04-2025

  • Politics
  • NZ Herald

New Zealand First proposes legislation to define ‘woman', ‘man' in law

The legislation is a Member's Bill in the name of NZ First MP Jenny Marcroft. That means it's not a Government bill and will need to be pulled from Parliament's ballot before it's debated and voted on. NZ First leader Winston Peters said the legislation was 'not about being anti-anyone or anti-anything' but 'about ensuring we as a country focus on the facts of biology and protect the term 'woman' in law'. 'New Zealand First is the only party that campaigned on keeping men out of women's sports, keeping men out of women's and girl's changing rooms, and we have received two petitions this term calling for protecting the term 'woman' in legislation. 'We were told at the time that we were going down a 'rabbit hole' and 'on another planet'. But if you look at recent events, both internationally and in New Zealand, the pendulum is swinging back towards common sense and is proving us right.' He said this would 'ensure our country moves away from the woke ideology that has crept in over the last few years, undermining the protection, progression and safety of women'. The Herald has sought reaction from Women's Minister Nicola Grigg to last week's ruling in the UK and whether she agreed with the definition it has put forward. In 2020, the Ministry for Women said it defined 'women' as 'people who identify as women'. 'This definition is inclusive of transgender women,' it said. The ministry's website said it 'represents the interests of all women, including transgender women, and we recognise the right of all people to self-identify'. 'We acknowledge the diversity of women and girls in Aotearoa New Zealand and focus on improving outcomes for wāhine Māori, Pacific women, migrant women, women who are former refugees, women with disabilities and the rainbow community.' Last month, NZ First MP and associate Health Minister Casey Costello directed Health New Zealand Te Whatu Ora to use the term 'women' instead of 'pregnant people' in communications. Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said he supported having 'common-sense language' and believed most people would consider pregnant people are women. NZ First has introduced a number of pieces of legislation intended to counter 'woke' elements of society, including a bill to remove diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) aspects from the public service.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store