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The National (Scotland)
The National (Scotland)
National
Laura Webster

JK Rowling: MSP who quit Government over gender recognition law is a 'heroine'

THE SNP MSP who quit the Scottish Government in a row over plans to reform the gender recognition process has been hailed as a “heroine” by JK Rowling.

The author, a vocal critic of the reforms whose views have been described as "cruel" and "inaccurate" by LGBT+ campaigners, praised Ash Regan, saying: “This is what a principled politician looks like.”

Her comments on Twitter came after Regan stood down as community safety minister in the Scottish Government.

On Tuesday, the SNP MSP said there should have been a free vote on the legislation last week.

She said then that her conscience would not allow her to vote for the Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill, quitting her ministerial post just hours before it faced its first vote at Holyrood.

Rowling, who has previously tweeted a picture of herself wearing a T-shirt calling Scotland’s First Minister a “destroyer of women’s rights” took to social media to praise Regan.

The Harry Potter author wrote: “This is what a principled politician looks like.

“@AshtenRegan will rightly be seen as a heroine when future generations of Scottish women look back at the profoundly misogynistic legislation currently being pushed through by the Sturgeon government.”

The legislation, which passed its first Holyrood vote by 88 to 33 last week, includes proposals that will remove the requirement for someone to obtain a medical diagnosis of gender dysphoria before they can seek a gender recognition certificate (GRC).

The proposals also set out to reduce the amount of time someone must live in their acquired gender from two years to three months, with an additional three-month reflection period – while the minimum age for obtaining a certificate will be cut from 18 to 16.

Regan tweeted her thanks to the “hundreds of constituents and others across Scotland” who had contacted her since she left the Government to support her stance.

She added: “This is an issue of a deep concern to many and I am touched that some have shared their experiences of trauma with me and their need for safe spaces.”

Giving a statement to journalists in the Scottish Parliament later, Regan said she had got into politics to improve the lives of women.

She said: “I deeply regret that I will not be able to continue in that work.

“My beliefs and my commitment to building a better Scotland for all of us, but especially for women and girls, is what drives me as a politician.

“It drives my politics, it drives me as a person as well.

“I think last week – for the SNP – the vote should have been a free vote.”

She said she had concerns around legal protections for women and her “conscience” would not allow her to vote for the Bill.

Regan added: “I want to be really clear on this point, I am not against reforms that make the lives of trans people better.

“But I want us to get into a place where we can respect everybody’s rights.”

She said First Minister Nicola Sturgeon was “well aware” of her concerns about the Bill, despite her letter saying Regan had not raised the issue with her.

Scottish Social Justice Secretary Shona Robison told Holyrood last week that the changes would make the process of obtaining a gender recognition certificate “simpler, more streamlined, and more respectful of the privacy and dignity of trans men and women”.

The bill is needed because “many trans people find the current system overly medicalised, complex, intrusive and invasive”, Robison said.

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