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LGB Alliance

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LGB Alliance
The logo shows the letters "LGB" in a rectangle, followed by the word "Alliance" in capital letters.
FormationSeptember 2019; 2 years ago (2019-09)
FounderBev Jackson
Kate Harris
Ann Sinnott
Allison Bailey
Malcolm Clark
Founded atUnited Kingdom
TypeNonprofit advocacy organisation
Registration no.limited company: 12338881 registered charity: 1194148 (England and Wales)
Legal statusActive
Websitelgballiance.org.uk Edit this at Wikidata

The LGB Alliance is a British advocacy group founded in 2019 in opposition to LGBT rights charity Stonewall's policies on transgender issues.[1] Its founders were Bev Jackson, Kate Harris, Allison Bailey, Malcolm Clark and Ann Sinnott. The LGB Alliance describes its objective as "asserting the right of lesbians, bisexuals and gay men to define themselves as same-sex attracted", and states that such a right is threatened by "attempts to introduce confusion between biological sex and the notion of gender".[1] It opposes gender-identity education in schools,[2] medical transition for children reporting gender dysphoria,[3] and gender recognition reform.[4]

The group has been described by the Labour Campaign for Trans Rights as transphobic, in a statement signed by a number of Labour MPs including current Deputy Leader Angela Rayner, and by SNP MP John Nicolson,[5][6][7] and by articles in two scholarly journals as "trans-exclusionary".[8][9] It has also been described by Labour MPs and several LGBT organisations and activists as a hate group.[10][11][12][13]

The group was granted charitable status by the Charity Commission in April 2021, which was controversial with LGBT groups in the UK, fifty of whom signed an open letter condemning it.[14] An appeal against its charitable status will take place in May 2022.[15]

History

In September 2019, twenty-two Stonewall members signed an open letter to The Sunday Times accusing leading UK gay-rights charity Stonewall of having "undermined women's sex-based rights and protections" through its policy on transgender issues.[16] It further stated that twelve months earlier, a group of LGB members had asked Stonewall to commit to "fostering an atmosphere of respectful debate" with those who wished to question its transgender policies, but that Stonewall had refused to allow any such dialogue, and that "if Stonewall remains intransigent, there must surely now be an opening for a new organisation committed both to freedom of speech and to fact instead of fantasy."[16]

One month after the publication of the open letter, it was announced that a new group called the LGB Alliance had been launched.[1] The group was co-founded by Bev Jackson,[17] Kate Harris,[18] Allison Bailey,[19] Malcolm Clark,[20] and Ann Sinnott,[21] with the support of Simon Fanshawe,[22] who spoke at the initial meeting on 22 October 2019 along with Miranda Yardley and Charlie Evans.[23] Harris stated that:

The main difference is that lesbians, gays, and bisexuals have something in common because of our sexual orientation, that has nothing to do with being trans. We welcome the support of anyone — gay, straight or trans — as long as they support our commitment to freedom of speech and biological definitions of sex. So we are a very broad and accepting group. We will be called transphobic, but we're not.[22]

In September 2020, an affiliated group was launched in Iceland, named . Samtökin '78 director Þorbjörg Þorvaldsdóttir condemned the group.[24] The next month, a similar group called was launched on Twitter. However, a number of Irish LGBT+ activists said that group was based in the UK and was mainly composed of British supporters.[25][26] This was disputed by the group, which stated that "all our committee members are living in Ireland, with representation in each of the four provinces".[27] In November 2020, LGB Alliance Ireland faced criticism after calling for schools to ignore LGBT youth organisation BeLonG To's Stand Up Awareness Week.[28]

In October 2020, Ann Sinnott, a director of LGB Alliance at the time, initiated a legal case calling for a judicial review of the Equality and Human Rights Commission's guidance on the Equality Act 2010, crowdfunding almost £100,000 for legal fees. The Alliance believes that the specifics of the Equality Act 2010 have been "misrepresented" by some organisations.[29] In May 2021 the case was found by the court to be unarguable, Justice Henshaw stating that "the claimant has shown no arguable reason to believe the Code has mislead or will mislead service providers about their responsibilities under the Act."[30]

In June 2021, LGB Alliance announced the appointment of five new trustees in addition to Harris, Jackson and documentary producer Malcolm Clark: co-founder of Shed Productions Eileen Gallagher OBE, strategy consultant Conrad Roebar, professor of philosophy Kathleen Stock OBE, professor of human rights law and Labour peer Lord Young of Norwood Green.[31] At the same time, Ann Sinnott announced her resignation as a director.[32]

In October 2021 the organisation was hosted with a stand at the Conservative Party Conference, which reportedly cost £6,000.[33][34] Later in October 2021, the organisation hosted a conference, whose guests included MPs Joanna Cherry, Jackie Doyle-Price, and Rosie Duffield, as well as former television writer and anti-trans activist and comedy writer Graham Linehan.[35][36][37] A protest against the Alliance was held outside the conference venue, including Daniel Lismore and the King's College London LGBT+ Society.[38][39]

On 5 November 2021, MP John Nicolson said that the Speaker of the House of Commons had referred "abuse and obsessive behaviour" from the Alliance to the House of Commons security as part of a review following the killing of David Amess. The Alliance had previously run a fundraising campaign for itself where it pledged that "make a donation to us IN HIS [Nicholson's] NAME and we will tweet out your message," subsequently tweeting a number of statements attacking Nicolson, including ones that called him a "rape-enabling politician".[40] The fundraiser had been removed from the JustGiving and GoFundMe crowdfunding platforms for violating their rules.[41]

Charitable status

In March 2020, the LGB Alliance submitted an application for charitable status to the Charity Commission for England and Wales. A petition set up against the application received 30,000 signatures.[42][43][44] The application was granted in April 2021.[14] After the Alliance was granted the status of charity, the released an open letter signed by more than 50 LGBT+ Pride groups across the UK condemning the decision, stating that "we know the LGB Alliance does not promote equality, diversity, and human rights."[45]

In June 2021, a number of groups, spearheaded by transgender youth charity Mermaids and the Good Law Project, appealed against the decision to grant charitable status on the basis that it did not "meet the threshold tests to be registered as a charity."[46] The Charity Commission issued a statement reaffirming that its role was "to decide whether an organisation's purposes fall within the legal definition of charity" and that objections to the LGB Alliance's application had been "carefully considered" in its decision to grant charitable status.[47] This hearing will take place in May 2022.[15] Mermaids are being supported in this appeal by the Good Law Project, the LGBT+ Consortium, Gendered Intelligence, Trans Actual, and the LGBT Foundation. Lui Asquith, director of legal and policy at Mermaids said "LGB Alliance purports to be an organisation that supports lesbian, gay and bisexual people, but it doesn’t. Many trans people are LGB and LGB Alliance actively works to oppose the advancement of rights of trans individuals."[48]

In August 2021, the Charity Commission announced that it would be engaging with the LGB Alliance trustees after the Alliance posted a Tweet stating that "adding the + to LGB gives the green light to paraphilias like bestiality – and more – to all be part of one big happy 'rainbow family'" which was subsequently removed by Twitter for violating the social media platform's rules.[49][50]

Views

LGB rights

Co-founder Bev Jackson said that lesbians are in danger of extinction due to disproportionate focus on transgender issues in schools: "At school, in university, it is so uncommon, it is the bottom of the heap. Becoming trans is now considered the brave option." She also voiced concern that "If you do not accept that everyone has a gender identity then you are automatically labelled transphobic which means you can no longer discuss women's lives and what's happening to lesbians. We are increasingly discovering that lesbians are no longer welcome in the LGBTQ+ world, which is astonishing."[2]

The group has said that the LGBT rights movement in the UK has "never demanded that society change its laws, its activities and its language to accommodate us" and that the focus was instead on building bridges.[51]

In June 2020, the Alliance said in a tweet that it is not homophobic to oppose same-sex marriage, citing a statistic that most lesbian, gay and bisexual people are not married. PinkNews says that the tweet was deleted following criticism from actor David Paisley, Scottish MP Mhairi Black, and journalist Owen Jones.[52][53] The Alliance later tweeted that "that tweet was very badly formulated! The introduction of same-sex marriage was a great breakthrough for gay people."[52][54]

The LGB Alliance is critical of the campaign by other LGBT+ groups to make conversion therapy illegal, stating that the campaign "is being used as political cover to promote an affirmation-only approach to gender identity".[55] The LGB Alliance also believes that affirmation-based therapy for transgender youth "is itself a form of conversion therapy" and has lobbied MPs to "stop transing the gay away".[56]

In a December 2020 article in The Telegraph, Camilla Tominey quoted Jackson saying "Lesbians don't have penises. A lesbian is a biological woman who is attracted to another biological woman. That's obvious. Or at least it was obvious until a few years ago."[2]

Scottish Gender Recognition Act

The Alliance opposes proposed legislation in the Scottish Parliament to change the process of legal recognition of gender to be "based only on self-identification rather than biological sex", and reduce the age of access from 18 to 16.[57]

The group took out adverts in Scotland to campaign against the Scottish government's plan to reform the Gender Recognition Act stating that the GRA reform would create a "gender free-for-all" and is "a law that could be exploited by predatory men who wish to hurt women and girls". A number of complaints were made to the UK's advertising watchdog, the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA), over the adverts. The ASA deemed the issue not serious enough for a full investigation, but issued the group with an "Advice Notice", advising that the messages could be "potentially misleading".[4]

Sex education

The Alliance supports compulsory relationships and sex education (in Scotland termed "Relationships, Sexual Health and Parenthood Education"), but says that the concept of gender identity is being taught as fact despite what Alliance representatives say is its lack of a scientific basis. They also allege that the materials being provided to schools are produced by campaign groups rather than people with any relevant qualifications in education or science and that the materials violate principles of safeguarding by instructing teachers to conceal children's expressed desires to transition from their parents.[58] The Alliance refers to this manner of teaching gender identity as potentially harmful propaganda.[58][non-primary source needed]

Treatment of gender dysphoric children

Bev Jackson accused the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust, which offers Gender Identity Development Services (GIDS) to children, of "transing out the gay".[2] She also referred to studies which showed that children who identified as transgender were more likely to be autistic, saying she had spoken with a teacher at an SEN (special educational needs) school who told her there were "24 trans kids, one non binary, but no gays and lesbians."[2]

In November 2020, Bev Jackson was quoted in a BBC story about children experiencing delays in access to gender reassignment treatment, saying "We don't think children should be allowed to self-diagnose any medical condition."[3] The next month, Jackson welcomed the High Court verdict in the Bell vs. Tavistock trial, which ruled that children should not be given puberty blockers without court approval.[2] In September 2021, the verdict was overturned by the Court of Appeal.[59]

Media coverage and criticism

According to journalist Gaby Hinsliff: "The Alliance is seen by many in the LGBT sector as a fringe organisation at best, and at worst a hate group."[60] It has been described as a hate group by Pride in London, Pride in Surrey, the LGBT+ Liberal Democrats, the Labour Campaign for Trans Rights, the Independent Workers' Union of Great Britain,[10] barrister Jolyon Maugham, Green Party of England and Wales co-leader Carla Denyer,[61] and journalist Owen Jones.[62][63][64][65] Broadcaster India Willoughby has described the group as "baddies masquerading as the good guys."[66] The group has also been described as "anti-trans" by the Trade Union Congress.[67]

In November 2020, the gay men's magazine Boyz retweeted Twitter posts from LGB Alliance and responded to criticism by suggesting that people not jump to conclusions about the organisation and instead "hear them out". Companies that advertised in Boyz or stocked the magazine were targeted with threats of boycotts and at least one venue, the cabaret club Royal Vauxhall Tavern, stopped selling it. The magazine eventually apologised "for the publicity we have given the LGB Alliance." The Spectator writer Brendan O'Neill wrote a defence of the Alliance after the Boyz controversy, arguing the group was being targeted by left wing activists who had deprived it of opportunities to raise money by getting it removed from crowdfunding websites and that activists had lobbied to have gay rights activist and LGB Alliance co-founder Allison Bailey investigated by her employers for transphobia.[68]

In December 2020, John Nicolson, member of parliament for Ochil and South Perthshire, described the group as "sinister"[2] and said that it was absurd for the BBC to rely on "transphobic groups like the so-called LGB Alliance" to give balance on reports about trans issues, saying "you would never do a report on racism, for example, and call in a racist organisation to say that they don't think black people have a right to equality".[7] In October 2021, Labour Shadow Minister for Women and Equalities Taiwo Owatemi argued that the Alliance "should be rejected by all those who believe in equality," saying that the Alliance "opposes LGBT+ inclusive education," disregards Gillick competency, and has opposed conversion therapy bans.[69]

The group has been condemned by a number of MPs, including SNP MP Mhairi Black, Liberal Democrat MP Jamie Stone, and Labour MP Charlotte Nichols.[70][71][72] A statement from the Labour Campaign for Trans Rights group calling LGB Alliance transphobic and trans-exclusionist was signed by two of the three candidates in the 2020 party leadership elections, Rebecca Long-Bailey and Lisa Nandy, as well as candidates for deputy leader Dawn Butler and Angela Rayner, the latter being elected deputy leader.[6][73] In July 2020, the group met with Conservative Minister for Women and Equalities Kemi Badenoch.[74] A number of other Conservative politicians, including MPs Ben Bradley, Jackie Doyle-Price and life peer Emma Nicholson have voiced support for the group.[75][76]

The Alliance has been described as trans-exclusionary in articles published in the journals Metaphilosophy and the Journal of Gender Studies.[8][9] A 2021 article in the International Journal of Sociology listed the Alliance among "UK lobby groups [that] are successfully pushing a radical agenda to deny the basic rights of trans people."[77] Mike Homfray of the University of Liverpool has argued that "there is ample evidence that the LGB Alliance, far from respecting the existence of trans people, has as a central aim their isolation and separation from LGB people."[78]

Dame Melanie Dawes, chief executive of Ofcom, responding to a comment from MP John Nicolson asking why "transphobic groups like the so-called LGB Alliance" should appear on BBC programming, said quoting anti-trans pressure groups in order to bring balance "can be extremely inappropriate".[79]

Gary Powell, who participated in the Alliance's pre-launch meetings and was involved in the promotion of its launch, has been criticised for speaking at events organised by the Heritage Foundation and writing for the Witherspoon Institute, both American conservative think tanks which have campaigned against LGBT rights.[80][81] Bev Jackson, one of the founders of the Alliance, has been criticised for saying that "working with the Heritage Foundation is sometimes the only possible course of action" since "the leftwing silence on gender in the US is even worse than in the UK."[82] Malcolm Clark, another Alliance co-founder, has been criticised for saying that he "[doesn't] see the point of LGBT clubs in schools," stating that it would offer "unnecessary encouragement" to predatory teachers.[83] The Alliance received criticism after giving controversial conservative social media personality Andy Ngo a press pass to their October 2021 conference and saying that "whatever his other work in the past, his work on the Wi Spa controversy was extraordinary and important."[84]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Hurst, Greg (24 October 2019). "Transgender dispute splits Stonewall". The Times. London. Retrieved 13 February 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Tominey, Camilla (25 December 2020). "Lesbians facing 'extinction' as transgenderism becomes pervasive, campaigners warn". The Telegraph. London. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  3. ^ a b Hunte, Ben (23 November 2020). "Trans teen in legal action over gender clinic wait". BBC News. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  4. ^ a b Parsons, Vic (6 February 2020). "LGB Alliance warned by advertising watchdog over 'potentially misleading' claims about gender recognition laws". PinkNews. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  5. ^ "'LGB Alliance' group faces criticism for being transphobic". The Independent. London. 24 October 2019. Retrieved 27 January 2021. A new lesbian, gay and bisexual alliance group has been heavily criticised for excluding the transgender community, prompting people to label it transphobic.
  6. ^ a b Weaver, Matthew (13 February 2020). "Labour leadership contenders split over trans group pledge card". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 27 January 2021. Lisa Nandy has joined Rebecca Long-Bailey in signing the 12-point pledge card by the Labour Campaign for Trans Rights (LCTR) that also describes some organisations including Woman's Place UK as "trans-exclusionist hate groups".
  7. ^ a b Marlborough, Conor (16 December 2020). "'Entirely inappropriate' to quote LGB Alliance on trans issues, says Ofcom chief". The Scotsman. Edinburgh. Retrieved 29 January 2021. Several high-profile LGBT+ campaigners have labelled the LGB Alliance a hate group
  8. ^ a b Guyan, Kevin (4 January 2021). "Constructing a queer population? Asking about sexual orientation in Scotland's 2022 census". Journal of Gender Studies: 1–11. doi:10.1080/09589236.2020.1866513. LGB Alliance (2019) (a UK trans-exclusionary LGB organization) argued the NRS proposal 'would suggest that other sexual orientations exist beyond attraction to the opposite sex, same sex or both sexes' (p. 2) and requested that the census not include the term 'Other sexual orientation' as a response option
  9. ^ a b Monque, Pedro (3 February 2021). "On Decolonizing Social Ontology and the Feminist Canon for Transnational Feminisms: Comments on Serene J. Khader's Decolonizing Universalism". Metaphilosophy: meta.12468. doi:10.1111/meta.12468. S2CID 234040622. some trans‐exclusionary LGB movements have begun to form around TERF ideology (for example, the LGB Alliance in the United Kingdom and the Red LGB movement in Spain).
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  22. ^ a b Gluck, Genevieve (23 October 2019). "What's Current: Dispute over gender identity splits Stonewall, creating LGB faction". Feminist Current. Retrieved 13 February 2021.
  23. ^ Sonia Poulton [@SoniaPoulton] (22 October 2019). "At #LGB Alliance and we're off. Speakers tonight include Miranda Yardley, Simon Fanshawe, Charlie Evans ... This is a meeting about deeds not words, learning from the past and laying foundations of a new organisation to be launched in 2020...Miranda Yardley "instead of the freedoms we fought for we have a bunch of buzzwords" ... Ruth Hunt has sold out lesbians and gays ... and Stonewall must be pulled down - Miranda Yardley ... Charlie Evans was contacted by 'mostly autistic' and 'mostly women' when she started to question her transition from female to male ... 'Gender critical thinking de-transed me' says Charlie Evans ... Simon Fanshawe co-founder of Stonewall is talking about beginning of the charity. 'The whole strategy was to talk about society and our voice within that.' ... Simon Fanshawe 'The only way we made progress was talking to people we didn't agree with' #LGBAlliance'" (Tweet) – via Twitter.. See also https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1186705679064686593.html
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  25. ^ Donohoe, Katie (20 September 2020). "New 'Irish' anti-trans 'hate group' believed to be a British import". Gay Community News.
  26. ^ Kelly, Emma (31 October 2020). "LGB must stand with T in the fight against transphobia". Irish Independent. Dublin. Retrieved 7 June 2021.
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  38. ^ Holmes, Keir (28 October 2021). "KCL LGBT+ Society protest against LGB Alliance Conference". Roar News. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  39. ^ Yalcinkaya, Günseli (25 October 2021). "How trans activists and allies disrupted the LGB Alliance Conference". Dazed. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  40. ^ McMahon, Liv (5 November 2021). "House of Commons Speaker refers historic 'abuse' sent by LGB Alliance to Scottish MP John Nicolson to security after David Amess killing". The Scotsman. Edinburgh. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  41. ^ Parsons, Vic (30 April 2020). "LGB Alliance fundraising page ripped down – twice – after 'violent and abusive' language and campaign of abuse against gay MP". PinkNews. London. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  42. ^ Reid-Smith, Tris (2 April 2020). "LGBT+ people bid to stop anti-trans LGB Alliance getting charity status". Gay Star News.
  43. ^ Parsons, Vic (28 December 2020). "Gay MP says 'under no circumstances' should 'abusive and sinister' LGB Alliance be granted charitable status". PinkNews.
  44. ^ Parsons, Vic (1 April 2020). "Thousands of people sign petition to stop 'anti-trans' group LGB Alliance receiving charitable status". PinkNews.
  45. ^ Milton, Josh (29 April 2021). "UK Pride groups unite against anti-trans LGB Alliance being granted charity status". PinkNews.
  46. ^ Parsons, Vic (2 June 2021). "LGBT+ groups appeal decision to register anti-trans LGB Alliance as charity". PinkNews. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
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  49. ^ Weakley, Kirsty (19 August 2021). "Charity Commission engages with LGB Alliance after Twitter violation". Civil Society News.
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  51. ^ "How the Anti-Trans Movement is Weaponising Gay Liberation". Novara Media. Retrieved 11 October 2021.
  52. ^ a b Kelleher, Patrick (19 June 2020). "LGB Alliance, which claims to stand for gay rights, argues it isn't homophobic to oppose same-sex marriage in deleted tweet". PinkNews. Retrieved 27 March 2021.
  53. ^ LGB Alliance [@ALLIANCELGB] (18 June 2020). "To those people saying it is "homophobic" not to be in favour of gay marriage have a look at the statistics. It seems it's rather a small minority who have made their wedding vows. #LGBIssues #CanWeDropItNowPlease #NotABigDeal #PluralityOfViewsIsAllowed" (Tweet). Archived from the original on 18 June 2020 – via Twitter.[self-published]
  54. ^ LGB Alliance [@ALLIANCELGB] (18 June 2020). "That same-sex marriage tweet was very badly formulated! The introduction of same-sex marriage was a great breakthrough for gay people. But support for it wasn't universal among LGB activists: many saw it as a sellout - joining the establishment. A minority still view it that way" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
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External links

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