SUBMISSION AND COMPLIANCE: risks for Stonewall Champions

Stonewall have signed up more than 850 companies, charities, government departments and public authorities to be “Stonewall Diversity Champions.” Naomi Cunningham examines the risks for participating bodies.

Stonewall is an LGBT charity and lobbying  group that started small, edgy and rebellious in 1989.  It has grown. These days, it has an enviably cosy relationship with the Establishment and an annual income of over £8M.

Stonewall’s employer programmes

Stonewall runs two related programmes that employers can join to demonstrate their commitment to LGBT equality, the Workplace Equality Index and the Diversity Champions scheme. 

More than 850 employers have signed themselves up as Diversity Champions. It’s an impressive list, full of global mega-corporations and household names; magic circle law firms; prestigious universities; government departments and regulators. Amazon, Marks & Spencer, Nestlé;  Imperial College London, Oxford University, the Royal College of Art; the Crown Prosecution Service and the Care Quality Standards Commission, to name but a few.  

It’s not completely clear from Stonewall’s website how the two programmes interact, but at any rate they explain that one of the benefits an employer gets with membership of the Champions scheme is “in-depth, tailored feedback” on their submission to the Workplace Equality Index. The Champions evidently get their money’s worth out of this feedback, because every single one of the top 100 employers on the Workplace Equality Index is also a Diversity Champion.

Qualifying for the Workplace Equality Index 

So what do you have to do to win one of these coveted places on the list of Stonewall’s top 100 employers?  Stonewall’s own website is a little bit coy about that, but thanks to a Freedom of Information Act request submitted on Whatdotheyknow.com (thank you, M Hunter), we can see the whole of Edinburgh University’s 2019 submission, complete with the questions they were required to answer, and Stonewall’s feedback. As a result, Edinburgh University makes an illuminating case-study. They had learned their lessons well, and received approving feedback from Stonewall, but even so they didn’t make it into either the 2019 or the 2020 “Top 100 Employers” lists. We can infer that their levels of compliance are far from exceptional even among “Diversity Champions.”

The Workplace Equality Index submission is a major piece of work. The questions alone run to 4,000 words, divided into 10 sections: 

1. Policies and benefits

2. The employee lifecycle

3. LGBT Employee Network Group 

4. Allies and role models 

5. Senior leadership 

6. Monitoring 

7. Procurement 

8. Community engagement 

9. Clients, customers and service users 

10. Additional work 

Edinburgh University’s answers run to more than 15,000 words, excluding the documents they appended. But the work that goes into such a submission is of course much, much more than simply collating the evidence – detailed though it is – that Stonewall asks for.  The point of the exercise is to embed Stonewall’s values, and Stonewall’s interpretation of the law, deep into the organisation’s policies and management and workplace culture. So policies must be drafted. Staff must be trained on them. Senior managers must demonstrate buy-in. Junior and academic staff must be shamed or coerced into active “allyship.” Efforts must be made to influence suppliers, customers and service users. Social media accounts must toe the party line.

Sampling the submission 

Let’s take a couple of examples from Edinburgh University’s submission. Question 1.2 asks: 

Does the organisation have a  policy (or policies) which include the following? Tick all that apply. 

A. Explicit ban on discrimination based on sexual orientation

B. Explicit ban on discrimination based on gender identity and gender expression

C. Explicit ban on bullying & harassment based on sexual orientation

D. Explicit ban on bullying & harassment based gender identity and gender expression

E. None of the above

The University ticks the first four, and obediently pastes the relevant excerpts from their “Dignity and Respect” and “Trans Equality” policies. 

There are two points to note here. The first is that the demands Stonewall makes go beyond what the law requires. Sexual orientation is a protected characteristic under the Equality Act, as is gender reassignment (which doesn’t get a mention in Stonewall’s catechism). But “gender identity” and “gender expression” are not, and it’s far from clear what they mean.  If “gender expression” is about performing gender stereotypes – whether of dress, make-up, behaviour, interests, or in any other way – then it is impossible and undesirable to ban all discrimination on grounds of gender expression. Some workplaces will justifiably require long hair to be tied back or covered; high heels will be inappropriate or dangerous in many environments. Interrupting, ignoring and talking over women is a core part of many men’s gender expression, but employers are entitled to – and indeed should – take steps to control it. 

The second point is that Edinburgh University publishes all its equality policies, here. What’s striking about that list is that gender reassignment is the only protected characteristic that has its own dedicated policy. There is no “Sex Equality Policy,” no “Disability Equality Policy,” no “Race Equality Policy,” no “Religion or Belief Equality Policy.” There isn’t even a general “LGBT Equality Policy.” But there is a special “Trans Equality Policy.” 

Now, it is often said by the pious that “rights aren’t pie”: that is to say, there’s no fixed quantity of “rights” so that if one group gets more, the others must get less. That’s a half-truth. Rights may not be pie, but time, attention, energy and money most definitely are pie. If University managers are pouring hours of their time into drafting and implementing Trans Equality Policies that meet with Stonewall’s approval, that’s time they won’t have spent wondering why their female staff earn less on average, or occupy more junior lectureships but fewer Chairs than their male colleagues; or checking that colleagues of a hearing-impaired member of staff know how to ensure that she is fully able to participate in meetings; or trying to work out how to eradicate the effects of unconscious racial bias in vivas or disciplinary proceedings.

Question 4.5 asks: 

Does the organisation support all non-trans employees (including lesbian, gay and bi employees) to become trans allies through training, programmes and/or resources?

The University describes the training: 

A couple of our Allies continue to present training on what they had learned from their training, covering topics such as the gender-bread person. They also promote rainbow laces and rainbow lanyards at the training. They reach out to SPN [Staff Pride Network] and with their help with their ‘lunch-and-learn’ sessions on LGBT+ issues, specifically focusing on trans issues.

Any Stonewall resources/emails/programmes are shared with Allies. The EDI [Equality, Diversity and Inclusion] fund many training events and expenses where possible. The EDI team have booked and funded 4 places at the last November Stonewall Scotland Conference in Edinburgh in November 2018. Two LGBT+ Committee, 1 x Allies and one student attended. Also advertise & fund allies to attend any other relevant Stonewall events. Two places have been purchased for the forthcoming Stonewall Scotland Conference.

… 

We are consulting on a Trans and Non-Binary Gender Identity Online Toolkit to give guidance to all staff on being an ally to trans and non-binary colleagues. The policy will be supported by the Trans and Non-binary Gender Identity Toolkit to give guidance to all staff on terminology and how to be an ally to trans and non-binary colleagues.

This all involves work, time, money. Allies attend training, paid for by the University – and often provided by Stonewall. They present to colleagues, who must spend time listening to them. A toolkit on allyship is in production: someone has to draft it, others have to read it and be consulted on it. Rainbow laces and rainbow lanyards have to be bought and handed around. 

There are pages and pages of this stuff.  The investment in time and attention demanded of any organisation that is a “Stonewall Champion” or wishes to have a shot at making it to the “top 100” list – is immense. The submission document itself must have taken someone days (at least) to compile, but the work that goes into preparing the submission document is only the tip of the iceberg – it is only the evidence of the real work of submitting to Stonewall’s onerous demands.

Feedback 

One of the benefits of Stonewall Champion membership is that the organisation receives detailed feedback on its efforts to comply.  This sample from section 1 (“Policies and benefits”) is representative: 

[P]lease be really explicit that all policies are scrutinised for inclusive language. There is no mention of what bullying harassment may look like for the individual L,G or B identities. Overall ban is there, but needs to go further to explicitly include all sexual orientations and what this bullying and harassment looks like. Strong policy section, however use of Mother and Father has not been explicitly stated as inclusive of all trans identities. We would recommend using a gender neutral term, such as ‘parent who has given birth’ or ‘new mothers and other pregnant employees’… Please ensure your policy explicitly includes non-binary identities, and remove binary language around trans… We would look for more information about language and terminology specifically for non-binary identities, such as around specific pro-nouns.

Submission without reservation

You have to hand it to Stonewall. It’s an astonishingly audacious, skilful and successful operation. In summary, it goes like this: 

  • You pay for lots of Stonewall training. 
  • You pay for membership of a scheme that wins you the privilege of being – by turns – patronisingly congratulated and sanctimoniously nagged about how well you’ve absorbed and implemented that training. 
  • You lavish management time on embedding that training in every aspect of your operation, from Board to suppliers, from clients or users to middle management. You pay for more Stonewall training along the way. 
  • Stonewall set you a lengthy open-book examination on how well you’ve done that. 
  • You spend hours and hours plodding through that examination, meekly uploading your policies, giving examples of initiatives, training sessions, social media engagement etc. 
  • Stonewall mark your submission and give you feedback on areas on which you could improve your compliance  with their every demand, very likely involving more Stonewall training. 
  • You do the same again next year. 

It’s easy to see what’s in it for Stonewall. They’re a lobby group. Persuading people to their way of thinking is what they’re for; and if people are willing to pay them substantial sums of money for the privilege of being intensively and elaborately lobbied and then catechised on the degree to which they have absorbed and implemented the lobbying, what’s not to like?  

Why are serious organisations full of serious grown-up professionals willing to submit to these time-consuming indignities?

What’s more mysterious is why serious organisations full of serious grown-up professionals are willing to submit to these time-consuming indignities. How does it come about that magic circle law firms, government departments, universities and the rest are prepared to be so publicly suckered?  

The banner on the “submission portal” says it all, really:

Legal and reputational risks

You might think employers would discern a significant reputational risk – not only from being  associated with an organisation that has suffered Stonewall’s recent run of startling lapses of corporate judgment (their extraordinary attempt to silence a black lesbian barrister by complaining to her chambers and their irresponsible promulgation of scaremongering claims about effects of the recent High Court decision in Keira Bell’s case on the mental health of young people are just two examples) – but also simply in being publicly taken for this ride. 

But there are concrete legal risks too.

Judicial review of policies 

If you run a widget factory, and it may not matter very much to anyone other than your staff if you let Stonewall rainbow-wash all your policies.  (Though your staff may care; I’ll come to that shortly.)  

But if you are a public body, your policies and public communications will matter more widely, and some of them will be amenable to judicial review.  You will be bound by the public sector equality duty at section 149 of the Equality Act, and you will generally be required to act rationally and lawfully, and not to place improper or arbitrary fetters on the manner in which you make decisions, in the performance of your public functions. Policies that misstate the law or are based on an erroneous understanding of the law may themselves be unlawful.  

In 2020, a 13-year-old schoolgirl commenced judicial review proceedings against Oxfordshire County Council (a Stonewall Champion), complaining of their Trans Inclusion Toolkit. The Council had consulted with Stonewall and with their own Children and Young Person LGBT+ Inclusion Group on the drafting of the policy, but had not consulted more widely. The policy made various erroneous statements about the law. The High Court gave the claimant permission to seek judicial review, and at that point Oxfordshire withdrew its Toolkit – so the matter was never decided in court. 

A different teenager challenged the Crown Prosecution Service over its guidance to schools about hate crime and its membership of the Champions scheme; the latter failed, but only after the CPS had permanently withdrawn the schools guidance. 

In March 2021, Fair Play for Women challenged a decision by the Office for National Statistics to produce guidance advising respondents to the 2021 Census that they could answer the “sex” question by reference to state-issued documents, many of which can be changed on request. The High Court gave permission for judicial review and granted an interim order requiring the guidance to be taken down, pending an expedited hearing; and then the ONS accepted that the guidance was wrong and withdrew it permanently, also agreeing to pay FPFW’s legal costs.

Other challenges to Stonewall-inspired policies are under way, including to the Ministry of Justice’s approach to trans women in prison; to the EHRC’s guidance on single-sex spaces; and to the College of Policing’s policy on the recording of “non-crime hate incidents.”  

These kinds of challenges are likely to proliferate, because any public body that allows Stonewall to dictate or heavily influence the drafting of its policies will end up with policies that better reflect Stonewall’s views about how the law ought to be in than the reality of how the law is.

Judicial review of participation in Stonewall’s schemes 

Public bodies’ decisions to join Stonewall’s schemes may themselves be open to challenge: either the decision to make  a submission for inclusion in the Workplace Equality Index or to sign up as a Stonewall Diversity Champion, or both. 

A recent application for permission to seek judicial review of the Crown Prosecution Service’s membership of the Champions scheme failed at the permission stage. No transcript of that judgment is available, but it seems that the judge thought that membership of the scheme related only to the CPS’s role as an employer, and was unlikely to impinge sufficiently on its performance of its public functions to make it amenable to judicial review. 

That conclusion does not seem to me to take adequate account of the extent to which a submission to Stonewall’s Workplace Equality Index reaches – quite deliberately – into every aspect of an organisation’s operation, both its relations with its staff and its public-facing activities. This excerpt from the Safe Schools Alliance’s live-tweeting of submissions made by Ian Wise QC on behalf of the claimant suggests that the judge may not have fully informed on that question:  

Issue of disclosure, we are somewhat in the dark, what documents have been transferred between @cpsuk & @stonewalluk. 

As a public body, we should know what’s going on with the CPS. 

Has Stonewall trained CPS?

In fact, thanks to M Hunter’s FOIA request, we know (even if Cavanagh J didn’t) that Stonewall’s interest in the activities of its Champions extends well beyond their role as employers: sections 7, 8 and 9 of the Workplace Equality Index catechism deal, respectively, with procurement, community engagement and ‘clients, customers and service users.’  If the judge’s conclusion in the CPS case were correct, one might hope that any public body would answer those questions crisply: “We are a public body, and it is not appropriate for us to be answerable in private to a lobby group on matters relating to the performance of our public functions.”  Nevertheless, given the large proportion of Stonewall’s Top 100 Employers that are public bodies, it is reasonable for the public to wish to be reassured on that count.

As well as the questions that explicitly interrogate organisations about their outward-facing activities, there is a final catch-all question:  

Has the organisation done any further work in the past year to improve the working environment for LGBT staff?

The naive reader of that might think that this question only related to the organisation’s internal relations with its employees. The less naive reader will recall incidents like the attempt by employees at Hachette, publisher of JK Rowling’s latest children’s book The Ickabog, to force them to drop the book, or the mass letter signed by 338 Guardian employees protesting that the paper’s “transphobic content” interfered with their work, and suspect that what Stonewall and its Champions mean by “improving the working environment for LGBT staff” may well include ensuring that the organisation and all its employees toe the Stonewall line in performance of all  functions, private or public. 

In the case of Edinburgh University, the first two lines of its answer to the question would tend to confirm that suspicion: 

The EDI Team participated in the recent Stonewall Gender Recognition Act webinar. The slides from the webinar were shared with the SPN. EDI and SPN [Staff Pride Network] will meet to discuss GRA consultation. 

The slides themselves were not disclosed in response to the FOIA request, but this looks remarkably like the University submitting to having its own equality specialists “trained” by Stonewall on highly controversial proposals to reform the Gender Recognition Act, on which Stonewall’s stance is not merely to campaign for changes in the law, but to slur all opposition as “transphobic.”  Judging from the definition of “transphobia” appearing on Edinburgh University’s website, Edinburgh’s EDI team learned their lessons well. 

In the light of the scope of the demands made by Stonewall, and the elaborate efforts Edinburgh University’s answers showed they had expended in complying with them without even making it into the Top 100 Employers, it seems to me that every single public body that is signed up to the Stonewall Champions scheme or makes a submission to the Workplace Equality Index is laying itself open to potential judicial review. The failure of the application for judicial review of the Crown Prosecution Service’s decision should not be taken to offer any other public body much comfort on this front.

Discrimination claims 

Judicial review only applies to public bodies, or other bodies exercising a sufficiently important public function for the courts to assume a supervisory jurisdiction over them. But all employers, public and private, are subject to the Equality Act. There are risks for employers here, too, in signing up to Stonewall’s programmes.

Stonewall constantly pushes the idea that self-identification already has legal consequences, and self-identifying trans women (without a GRC) are automatically entitled to access women-only spaces. Employers that accept this and permit self-identifying trans women to use women’s toilets, locker rooms, or changing or washing facilities, etc may face indirect discrimination claims. This is a provision, criterion or practice that is applied to the whole workforce, but which is likely to put women at a particular disadvantage compared to men: the employer will be required to show that it is a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim. 

If women suffer sexual harassment as a result of these policies, employers are likely to be vicariously liable for that. 

Stonewall encourages employers to adopt policies under which “transphobia” is made a disciplinary matter. That would not be problematic if the Stonewall definition of transphobia were confined to hatred of trans people, or bullying or harassment or other mistreatment of them because of their status as such. But the Stonewall definition goes further: 

The fear or dislike of someone based on the fact they are trans, including denying their gender identity or refusing to accept it.

Employers that adopt a definition along these lines are threatening to police their employees’ thoughts and speech to an unacceptable degree. One would hope that most employees would refrain from bullying or harassing any of their colleagues on any grounds, including gender reassingment; and most employees will be content to use their trans colleagues’ pronouns of choice. But it is also to be expected that employees will remain aware of their colleagues’ biological sex. Much of the time this need not arise: in most workplace contexts, sex is irrelevant and can (and should) simply be ignored.  

But there are times when sex does matter. If a female employee goes to HR with a complaint that she feels embarrassed to use the ladies’ toilets when she has her period, because a colleague who is a trans woman has taken to using the same facilities, what is to be done? If she is told that the problem is with her, and her “transphobic” attitude to her colleague, she would seem to have grounds for a complaint of sex discrimination and/or discrimination on grounds of religion or belief.  If she walks into the toilet, but turns around and leaves on seeing her trans colleague there, will she be disciplined for “transphobic bullying”? If so, again, she is likely to have grounds for a claim.

If employers try to insist that employees either internally or outwardly accept that “trans women are women” in every possible sense, and there are no circumstances in which biological sex matters, they are imposing not merely a behavioural code on their employees, but a positive belief system. They are not entitled to do that: disciplining employees for politely expressing their dissent from the Stonewall creed is likely to be unlawful discrimination on grounds of religion or belief. (The employment judge who decided Forstater v CGD Europe at first instance may have taken a different view, but that decision does not set a binding precedent and has been heavily criticised, e.g. by Karon Monaghan QC on the UK Human Rights Blog. It seems unlikely to survive the scrutiny of the Employment Appeal Tribunal.)

Occupational requirements raise further tricky problems. It is lawful to restrict certain jobs to one sex or the other, if being of one sex or the other is an occupational requirement, and the application of that requirement is a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim. Marks & Spencer are undoubtedly entitled to restrict jobs as bra fitters to women. The legitimate aim is to secure the privacy and dignity of customers seeking help with choosing a bra that suits them; and restricting the work to women is proportionate, because the overwhelming majority of women will prefer not to take their bras off in the presence of a man they do not know. But if Marks & Spencer (who are a Stonewall Diversity Champion) decide that those jobs can be given to self-identifying trans women who do not have a GRC, then they will have destroyed the legal basis on which they restricted them to women in the first place. Any man may apply, and then sue for sex discrimination when he is not short-listed because he is a man. 

There’s a more diffuse way in which being a Stonewall Champion could make an employer more vulnerable to discrimination claims, too. Think back to Edinburgh University’s “Trans Inclusion Policy.”  It is the only equality policy the University has which is specific to a single protected characteristic. 

Imagine a substantial organisation with a staff population of 1000, which happens to be as near as possible an exact demographic mirror for the population of the UK as a whole. The total trans population of the UK is estimated to be between about 0.3% and 0.75%. of the total. About 51% of the UK population is female. About 16% of adults of working age have disabilities. About 1.3% are Hindu. About 6% have diabetes. About 3.4% of adults of working age are Black. On the basis of those percentages, our imaginary organisation employs 510 women and 490 men; 160 staff with disabilities of whom 60 have diabetes; 40 Black staff; 13 Hindus; and maybe between 3 and 8 trans staff. 

Now imagine that this organisation has – like Edinburgh University – adopted a specific Trans Equality Policy (with all the training, mentoring, monitoring, social media presence, rainbow merchandise and so on that that entails). But – also like Edinburgh University – it has no similar policy or programme of activities focusing on sex, race, disability, age, religion and belief, maternity or marital status. 

In other words, it has made a clear public statement about its priorities. Its 3-8 trans staff appear to be absorbing a grossly disproportionate amount of its time and attention compared to any of the other minority groups it employs – and especially as compared to its majority of 510 staff who are biological women.  And many of the respects in which it has decided, at Stonewall’s instigation, to gold-plate trans rights represent blatant incursions into women’s rights in particular. In a suitable case, that statement about an organisation’s priorities could legitimately form part of the material giving rise to an inference of discrimination on grounds of sex.  

Workplace health and safety obligations

Regulations 20, 21 and 24 of the Workplace (Health, Safety and Welfare) Regulations 1992 require employers to provide single sex toilet and changing facilities, unless instead they provide separate lockable rooms to be used by one person at a time. Trans people who do not have a GRC are still as a matter of law of the sex with which they were registered at birth; that is, their biological sex. It follows that employers which permit trans people to use facilities provided for the use of the opposite sex on the strength of self-identification are in breach of those regulations. Such breaches can be prosecuted as a criminal offence.

Duties to service clients, service users etc.

The variety of functions performed by the public bodies, charities and private companies appearing on Stonewall’s Diversity Champions list makes it impracticable to do more, here, than give a broad indication of the kinds of legal liabilities that may arise when organisations internalise Stonewall’s values and beliefs (or wishes) about the law. But none of the following scenarios is fanciful: 

  • A swimming pool opens its women-only sessions to trans women on the basis of self-identification. A Muslim woman who had been a regular attender gives up swimming, and sues for indirect discrimination on grounds of sex and/or religion.
  • A charitable trust set up to fund sports scholarships for women decides that its scholarships are to be open to “anyone who identifies as a woman.” A trans woman wins the qualifying competition for a triathlon scholarship, and is awarded £6,000 a year for the three years of her undergraduate degree. The runner up sues for indirect discrimination on grounds of sex. 
  • A local authority provides care at home, including intimate care, for a severely disabled girl. They have always sent a female carer. They write to the child’s parents to tell them that they have a  new carer on their books. Lynette/ David is non-binary, and sometimes attends work as a man, sometimes as a woman. Lynette will from time to time be attending to their daughter, although David won’t. The parents object, saying that they want a female carer, and they do not accept that Lynette/David is female even on Lynette days. The local authority tells the parents that rejecting Lynette is transphobic, and if they insist on doing so the care package will be withdrawn. The parents apply for judicial review of that decision. 
  • A woman attends a health centre for a gynaecological procedure. She has asked to see a female doctor. She sees a doctor who is a trans woman who does not have a GRC. The NHS Trust’s policy is to treat trans women as women for all purposes, and it considers that the doctor’s gender reassignment is a private matter which patients have no right to know about, so the patient is not told that the doctor is a trans woman. She is initially confused by the doctor’s appearance, but too embarrassed to say anything. Part way through the procedure, she becomes convinced that the doctor is physiologically male, but by this point she is frozen with embarrassment and continues to submit to the procedure anyway. She later complains to the police that she has suffered a sexual assault. 
  • An NHS trust that provides mental health services for children and young people operates an “only affirm” policy in relation to young patients presenting with gender dysphoria. A young female patient is referred, manifesting extreme distress and insisting that she is really a boy and she wants hormonal and surgical transition as soon as possible. Clinicians affirm her gender identity without exploring the possibility of other causes for her distress, and put her on puberty blockers and later testosterone. Soon after she turns 18, she undergoes a double mastectomy. The transition fails to relieve her distress. A few years later, she comes to understand that her belief that she was trans was a response to childhood trauma, unexplored at the time. She detransitions and sues the trust for negligence.  
  • A rapist and murderer is convicted and sentenced to a term of imprisonment. He has no medical history of gender dysphoria, although he has been an occasional cross-dresser for some years. After he has been sentenced, he says that he now identifies as female. He doesn’t seek medical treatment, but he does require to be provided with wigs, female clothing, and make-up. He is housed in a women’s prison where he rapes a female inmate. The victim brings judicial review and negligence claims against the prison. 
  • Rugby is played at a mixed school, with separate boys’ and girls’ teams and matches. A 17-year-old trans girl wants to join the girls’ First Fifteen. She plays “tight head prop,” a position in the front row of the scrum. Parents of several girls in the team write to the school to object, saying that  they fear for the safety of team-mates and opponents, and drawing the school’s attention to the evidence that was considered by World Rugby in its 2020 process about trans inclusion. The school disagrees, and allows the trans girl to play in a  school match between the girls’ First and Second Fifteens. A girl playing opposite the trans girl has her neck broken in a scrum, and dies. The school is prosecuted for corporate manslaughter.  

Conclusion 

Submitting to Stonewall is capable of leading to a whole world of pain for organisations of any kind, in any sector. The process will absorb endless hours of management time. It is not only time-consuming and tedious; but also – judging anyway from the “rainbow lanyard” antics and patronising feedback to Edinburgh University – considerably humiliating. It costs money. It will make you look silly, gullible and cowardly. 

If you are a public body, it will distort your policies and decision-making in ways that will expose you to judicial review, and embarrassing and expensive climb-downs of the kind already performed by Oxfordshire County Council, the Crown Prosecution Service and the Office for National Statistics.

But worst of all, depending on the nature of your functions, it may cause you to infringe liberties, mis-state the law, commit or condone criminal offences, and put children and vulnerable adults at risk of serious harm. 

Don’t submit to Stonewall. 

44 thoughts on “SUBMISSION AND COMPLIANCE: risks for Stonewall Champions”

  1. Excellent document – long awaited- let’s hope Organiations start to wise up- Stonewall was a great organiation but has now become a toxic lobbying org
    thankyou

    1. So sick of this shit. I don’t give a shit what you self ID as, that’s your business, so keep it to yourself, just because you self ID as something other than what u are in reality, doesn’t mean I have to indulge you and your mental illness. Someone should tell this to all these woke f wits out there.

  2. Worth noting also that Diversity Champions prices are £210 per delegate, so they’re shaking down employers and third sector bodies over that too.

    This is basically just a protection racket: “Accredit your organisation guvnor? Wouldn’t want anyone to call your transphobic, can’t imagine what that would do for your brand. Just £2,500 a year to give you that nice star badge for your website. And obviously you’ll be sending delegates to our conference, only £210 per person, and… “

  3. Fantastic article, thank you.
    Most governing bodies of sport in the UK have adopted Stonewall washed policies which discriminate against women and girls. Do you know if they are liable to legal action on the basis of sex discrimination too?

    1. It seems inevitable that there will be claims in the field of sports: the most obvious ones are (i) indirect discrimination when a girl or woman loses out to a trans-identifying male in competition for a prize, a scholarship or a team place; and (ii) negligence when a girl or woman is injured in a supposedly sex-segregated contact sport in which a trans-identifying male has been permitted to participate.

  4. Very interesting. My husband was until recently responsible for equality and diversity at a large organisation. He asked several times for trans people to contact him in confidence to allow him to understand how many trans people they employed. There were 2, and someone who was just starting transistion. Yet Stonewall demands significant changes in the workplace, disadvantaging the majority, for these few individuals whose needs could be met by some individual solutions and flexibility. The new census question may finally shed some light on this.

  5. Thank you. My local St Mungo’s hostel for homeless women defended its policy of housing transidentifying males with OR without a GRC with women, even though it said it was aware of the provisions of the Equality Act for women-only services, by saying that “St Mungo’s is a trans inclusive organisation recognised by Stonewall as a top trans employer.”. This was in private communication with me: as someone who donated to this specific service for some of the most vulnerable women, I was alarmed when the story broke that this policy had led to an assault and sexual harassment of women using the service.
    See statement published by St Mungo’s in response to reports about this: case:https://www.mungos.org/press_release/statement-mail-on-sunday/

    1. I took a look at St Mungo’s recruitment equality monitoring form last month. They asked for the ‘gender’ of the applicant and gave the options:

      Female
      Male
      Non-Binary
      Transgender.

      Needless to say, I’ve had no response. And they seem proud they were in Stonewall’s top 100 in 2018, 2019 and 2020.

      I have a list of all 300 plus organisations that I’ve looked at here.

      1. Thanks Alan. Where would those ‘transgender, and ,non-binary’ options get you in understanding the sex of the person…
        To add, I asked them specifically whether if they were to exclude trans identifying males, this would impact their funding – they said this was not the case: it is a matter of choice (of ideology) to ignore the Equality Act 2010 single sex exemptions. I asked them if they had ever sought the explicit consent of their female client group – they did not respond.

  6. You certainly got to the real reasons that Stonewall are using these gaslighting tactics.
    There needs to be less frightened CEO’s and senior management in every private company.
    As for the captured public sectors – these people work for us not for their woke credentials.
    The court cases cant come soon enough.

  7. This was very informative. Thankyou. I have a query though: while highlighting the deceptive inclusion of gender self ID in Stonewall training, as though it is law, the examples of unlawfully giving priority to self identified trans people without a GRC, over the sex based rights of women, seem to hinge on the trans person not having a GRC, but my understanding is that even with a GRC, it would be possible to give priority to women’s legal rights. For example, it would be possible to deny a man with a GRC a job as a bra fitter, to giver intimate care to women, to play rugby with women, and even the use of women’s toilets, if an assessment showed that by treating him as a woman in those cases, there would be a negative impact on women. Am I correct?

    1. Yes, that’s absolutely right. The different ways the Equality Act treats the single sex exceptions depending on whether the relevant individual does or doesn’t have a GRC are quite fiddly, and subtly different in different contexts. Broadly speaking, if it is lawful to exclude men, then it will be (a) automatically lawful to exclude trans-identifying males who do not have a GRC; and (b) mostly lawful, though in a somewhat more complicated way, to exclude trans-identifying males who do have a GRC.

  8. Thank you for this. This needs to be read and distributed far and wide. I have already linked to this and recommended that followers read and distribute it via. my own FaceBook page.

  9. Thank you for that insightful analysis. Stonewall at one time did very valuable, indeed essential, work in campaigning for fair and equal treatment for gay and lesbian people. Over the last decade or so, however, it has got considerably above itself and has morphed into a dictatorial social nuisance and must be strenuously resisted.

  10. Thank you for such a comprehensive article.

    Apart from the direct financing of engagement with Stonewall, I wonder about the cost, in staff time and opportunity costs, incurred by each of these organisations. Already hard pressed public sector organisations at that.

  11. Excellent piece – thank you! I work in the field of diversity and am still puzzled by how much all these organisations have embraced the Stonewall offering. Your question ‘Why are serious organisations full of serious grown-up professionals willing to submit to these time-consuming indignities?’ has yet to be answered. My only guess is that this ‘cause’ gains maximum brownie points without in any way threatening the status quo and power structure of the usually white male dominated organisation because the numbers are so small. Unlike a focus on women or even race and ethnicity.

    1. You’ve hit the nail on the head Sarah – by being seen as having the best trans policies in the world and as such, being SO DIVERSE, white male dominated organisations (like universities) can sit back and relax knowing these easy diversity policies will not threaten their status in any way. I say this to a friend’s teenage daughter who is obsessed with trans rights – take this energy and fight for women’s rights, for anti-racism, for disability rights.

  12. Stonewall’s behaviour appears bullying and full of intimidation. However such a great, informative assessment of their actions and MO, thank you. All Stonewall supporters should read this – and trans supporters. It is a frightening erosion of rights women have managed to accumulate over decades of fighting patriarchy.

    Your comment bout educated top drawer businesses being ‘suckered’ into believing Stonewall’s belief system does not surprise. Having worked for MOD and being force-fed Transformation by highly paid thought police Price Waterhouse I was struck by the fact they were basically teaching everyone how to just do their job properly. Hours were spent away from desks attending mandated training, having champions organise and present yet still you had to do your ‘proper job’ in less and less time. But no-one wanted to say what are we learning from this? It became abundantly clear when I watched a TV documentary after retiring out of Service; there was a hidden camera inside a PW senior exec meeting and they were all laughing about the giant scam they were undertaking-and stated that if you mentioned ‘Transformation’ senior management of customer organisations bricked-it because all their chums in other departments had done it, so they needed to do it too.

    Like the ‘Emperor’s clothes’ it was self-affirmation. Stonewall has indeed rainbow-washed all its customers and cemented itself financially into a very comfy position protecting a teeny tiny number of s group of biological men whose behaviour ends in usurping, undermining and even destroying the status and already limited powers of a far greater number of biological women.

  13. I found the comment about pie quite funny.

    “The university is spending time on trans equality ergo they aren’t spending time on female equality”.

    The argument can be extended to “the university is spending time on frivolous FOI requests about Stonewall submissions, instead of spending time on female equality”

    It’s interesting that you don’t mention the efforts the university put towards Athena Swan certification, which is specifically about advancing women’s careers. It’s almost as if you are trying to be a victim by looking at what others you don’t like are doing.

    I find the anti-trans arguments of banning them from women’s toilets to be so ridiculously overblown. Firstly the risk of sexual assualt; women and trans-women both have elevated risks of being the victims of sexual assault. But instead you focus on the differences between women and trans-women and then throw trans-women under the bus (e.g. suggesting putting them at higher risk of sexual assault) because of a perceived risk that is not borne out by evidence. There is no evidence to show that there is a higher risk of sexual assault for women when trans-women are permitted entry to women’s bathrooms.

    Secondly the example of an employee on their period being disturbed by the presence of a trans woman. How do you use the bathroom? I was under the understanding that each person has their own private cubicle. To be honest I would be disturbed if there was any person in the cubicle with me as I changed my period products or used the toilet. Meanwhile, when I’m in that cubicle anybody could be on the outside of it; to be honest, a clown could come in do a little dance outside the cubicle and leave before I exit, and I’d be none the wiser. So anybody claiming that a trans-women in the cubicle next to them makes them uncomfortable is just being irrational. And thats where transphobia comes in.

    To react that way is transphobic, because it is an irrational fear that is not borne out by actual risk. Every phobia is just a fear that is based on someone perceiving far greater risks than are actually borne out by evidence. Any employee that is dealing with irrational fears, should probably sort them out, rather than expect everyone else to accommodate them.

    1. Not even to mention that the transphobia of being uncomfortable sharing a bathroom with a trans-woman is incredibly shallow.

      Truth is some trans-women you wouldn’t even know were trans. So the effect of their presence on your comfort would be a function of how feminine those individuals were according to your definition of feminity. So in reality you would be denying people use of a bathroom purely on the basis of feminine/masculine features. I mean unless you wanted organisations to stick a doorman on every women’s bathroom to look at ID’s/or genitals on entry.

      And given the doorman idea is completely unworkable, your prejudice against trans-women is likely to have a discriminatory effect on women who present themselves in a masculine way or have masculine features.

    2. Do Athena Swan extend their definition of ‘female academic’ to include male academics who identify as women?

    3. The Athena Swan certification is like stonewall certification, not worth the paper it is written on. We have seen universities hide behind it whilst ignoring discrimination against and sexual harassment and assault of female staff and the student body.
      There is nothing frivolous about these FOI requests or they would simply not be responded to as vexatious or frivolous requests are simply refused.
      There is no evidence to show that women are at a lower risk of assault or sexual assault from biological males whether they are ‘cis’ (gah!) or trans; there is however evidence that transwomen commit these crimes against females at the same rate as other biological males, which is at a higher rate than sexual assault by females. Look it up.
      As most transpersons are heterosexual, or rather same-gender attracted (again, gah!), this is hardly shocking, nor is it surprising that women might be alarmed to find biological males, especially those who self-identify, in their single-sex spaces.
      Some transwomen are autogynephilic and obsess over women’s menstruation, so yes it could be as uncomfortable for a female of any age to see a transwoman mooching around the ladies’ loo as any other male.
      There is nothing irrational about women’s fear of men/males especially in private spaces where they may become trapped. Having been cornered in a ladies toilet by males twice, the first time in my school uniform, where the perpetrator described how he peeped on me having my ‘monthly’ and laid his hands on me whilst spewing obscenities, I find your comments belittling of my lived experience of sexual assault (this was not the only one), and misogynistic in the extreme. You are clearly one of those people who believe that if it never happened to you it must never happen. Shame on you.

    4. Trans-people claim their emotions/feelings are consequential. Primarily that their internal feeling that they are of the sex other than their physical body requires legislative and NHS recognition and action. And that their distress in response to lack of acceptance, including, but not only, overt bullying and violence, requires organisations and people to change behaviour. If their emotions are to be recognised in this fashion, so too must the emotions of others, such as women, be recognised.
      Until very recently, and even now for a high proportion of girls, women were socialised to conceal their periods and to believe they smell when bleeding and to find revealing that they had or are having periods or bought menstrual products humiliating. Males respond in ways that affirm their fears. My own nephew said “yuck, that’s disgusting” when my dog was on heat and bleeding. He had been socialised at school by his male peers to respond to female bleeding in this fashion. It is reasonable for a woman to feel vulnerable to male perceptions and responses. Many are anxious about being heard or smelt by others when in a toilet cubicle. This is part of our body-dysmorphic culture and part of the problem with trans-ideology is the rejection of such experience by those who claim that being a woman is purely a culturally assigned identity rather than a life-long interaction between the body and the self.

    5. You make the oft repeated point that trans women are also at risk of being the victims of sexual assault, as though increasing the risk to women is justified for that reason. You then go on to deny the risk and claim there is no evidence of that risk. Either you do not know about the cases of self identifying trans women sexually assaulting women in women only spaces or you are being deliberately disingenuous. If you Google ‘Karen White’ you will see that your claim in that regard is just not true.

      In your remarks about your use of toilet facilities you seem to assume that, because it is OK with you it should be OK with everyone. That sort of thinking is, of course, at the root of a lot of prejudice.

  14. I don’t care for the language used here. Not always dispassionate or objective as one should expect from a mainly legal critique. Also incredibly lop-sided. If there are objections to aspects of Stonewall’s methods, where are the suggestions or changes that the writer believes would in fact still protect trans individuals’ rights in the workplace, or balance those rights with the rights of others, but address their concerns.

    1. Stonewall could begin by getting out of the indulgence business. Medieval clerics used to earn the odd coin by selling absolutions and blessings. Stonewall seems to be doing much the same.

  15. I have had concerns regarding the practices of Stonewall regarding the issues you have raised for some time. I have only recently found out that my local council (Rhondda Cynon Taff) is a member of the Champions scheme. Do you have any advice about what action I can take against my local council for using public taxes and council time to jump through the hoops that are required to become members of this scheme at the detriment of other areas of inequality?

  16. Thank you very much for this. Very easy to read and most understandable. Obvious now that’s there some Stonewall background to the Scottish National Party and their fusion to the Greens (Patrick Harvey)

    If I was a journalist or politically minded, I would dig into that.

    Much appreciated.
    Brian

  17. Over lockdown neither of our children were able to use the Lewisham swimming pool and consequently they have not yet learned to swim. Over lockdown my Mum and Uncle who are regular swimmers could not swim and their bodies seized up with my Mother needing a new knee and my Uncle needing a hip replacement.

    Once the pool was open I looked at the Lewisham timetable and saw that there was a regular slot reserved for Trans Swimmers. How many Trans Swimmers are there in Lewisham versus elderly people with aches and pains and compared with number of children who MUST learn to swim so they do not drown. I can understand why people with physical and mental disabilities should be given their own time slot. Why can’t Trans swimmers swim with everyone else?

  18. A very interesting article and I took a lot more from it than my comment will suggest, but others have already said those things better than me (suffice to say, organisations should follow the law, not what they would like the law to be, and they should make sure they get advice from lawyers rather than lobbyists).

    What fascinates me about this whole debate though – and again the author complies with all of the examples she chose – is that it almost entirely focuses on men who identify as women. On the one hand (and as is typical), women are ignored even though FTM people are similar in number to MTF. On the other, the author plays with the old stereotype that men are a threat and women are not.

    So, here’s the conundrum. Women not wanting men identifying as women but without GRC in their public toilets makes sense. However, if you take this to a logical conclusion it also means FTM people who have started but not completed GRC cannot use men’s public toilets either. Interestingly, there have already been reports about “butch looking” lesbians being shamed out of using female toilets by other women, which suggests there is not going to be a tolerance of FTM people using women’s restrooms so where do they go? Similarly, they can still become a bra fitter, they can still be a carer for female patients etc etc.

    Of course, this means the law as it exists is more difficult to apply in practice one
    it’s looked at for all transgender people and not just for MTF and probably needs to be a lot clearer. At what point does a MTF person become a woman? At what point does a FTM person become a man? Is it even the same point in either direction?

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