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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics
Tom Ambrose (now) and Martin Belam (earlier)

UK politics: Badenoch calls for broader review of equality and gender recognition laws – as it happened

Campaigners celebrate outside the supreme court on Wednesday.
Campaigners celebrate outside the supreme court on Wednesday. Photograph: Vuk Valcic/ZUMA Press Wire/REX/Shutterstock

Closing summary

  • Opposition leader Kemi Badenoch has said she would support a broader review into equality and gender recognition laws in the wake of yesterday’s supreme court ruling. Speaking to broadcasters during a visit to Cambridgeshire, PA Media report Badenoch said: “Biological sex is real. A gender recognition certificate is there to show that someone is now transgender, but that doesn’t change their biology. So we need to make sure that the law is clear and the public bodies follow the law, not guidance from organisations that don’t understand it.”

  • Kishwer Falkner, chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), described yesterday’s supreme court ruling as “a victory for common sense, but only if you recognise that trans people exist. They have rights, and their rights must be respected – then it becomes a victory for common sense. It’s not a victory for an increase in unpleasant actions against trans people. We will not tolerate that.”

  • Badenoch also criticised authorities in Hong Kong and China for not allowing Liberal Democrat MP Wera Hobhouse into Hong Kong. Hobhouse was attempting to visit family there when she was refused entry. Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey has called for the Foreign Office to summon the Chinese ambassador over the issue.

  • The country’s largest education union will campaign in Labour MPs’ constituencies and make them “pay a high political price” if the pay offer is not improved, a union chief has warned. Daniel Kebede, general secretary of the National Education Union (NEU), said they “stand ready” to take strike action if the government’s final pay and funding offer is not increased, PA Media reported.

  • PA Media reports that Rupert Lowe MP has instructed lawyers to issue letters of claim for defamation against Reform UK’s leader Nigel Farage, chair Zia Yusuf and Lee Anderson, who is the chief whip of the four-strong parliamentary group. Lowe was recently suspended from the party, shortly after he appeared to gain public support from Elon Musk to replace Farage as leader.

  • First minister John Swinney has said the SNP will “have to work incredibly hard” to retain the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse constituency in the June byelection there. MSP Christina McKelvie held the seat from 2011 until her death last month, and Swinney said the poll was taking place in “really sad circumstances.”

  • Shadow chancellor Mel Stride has highlighted the recent report by the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW) which suggested business confidence in the UK has dipped severely. In a post to social media, the recently knighted MP said: “I take no pleasure in the ICAEW’s latest survey, which reveals UK business confidence has slipped into negative territory for the first three months of 2025, thanks to Labour’s anti-business budget.”

  • British Transport Police (BTP) said trans women in custody will be searched from now on by male officers, in a change to their policy in light of yesterday’s supreme court ruling. The new policy appears to apply regardless of whether the person has undertaken gender reassignment surgery.

  • Health minister Karin Smyth has said she hopes the outcome of the supreme court’s ruling on the legal definition of the term woman will draw a line under arguments over gender recognition

  • Shadow cabinet member Richard Holden called for the government to pass legislation to codify the judgement in

  • Ministers are having an “active conversation” with UK pharmaceutical firms about the potential impact of US tariffs

  • People are being warned of Easter disruption to the rail network, with over 300 engineering works being undertaken. National Highways said it has removed roadworks from 1,127 miles of motorways and major A roads in England

You can read our report about the latest implications from yesterday’s supreme court ruling here

Updated

I remember being 16 in the 1960s. The prime minister seemed geriatric and I was sure he should be in care, while a group of us went to meet our young MP, a certain Margaret Thatcher. She was young, but she didn’t seem as if she was with the times. We could not dream of voting for someone like her. Matter closed.

Sixteen-year-olds are great fun but they are not grown up. They cannot marry in England and Wales, drive, smoke, get a tattoo or buy alcohol on their own. They are legally classed as children and are supposed to be in formal education or training to 18. Sixteen-year-olds have not taken to the streets demanding the right to the franchise, like the Chartists or suffragettes did.

So why has Keir Starmer suddenly reiterated that he intends to enfranchise them to vote in UK-wide elections? The only plausible answer is that he hopes they will vote for him. In a desperate attempt to justify this manoeuvre, he says that, if 16-year-old soldiers “are old enough to take a bullet for our country”, they should get the vote. (Likewise if they are “old enough to work” and “pay taxes”.)

In fact, 16-year-olds are not old enough to “take a bullet”, since frontline army service is banned for under-18s. Meanwhile, precious few 16-year-olds work, since Starmer’s own party, when last in power, made it supposedly compulsory for them to remain in education or training to 18. As for taxes, younger children already pay VAT when they spend their pocket money. The whole argument is slapdash.

The prime minister has paid tribute to Christians “facing hardship, persecution or conflict around the world who cannot celebrate freely” in an Easter message.

Keir Starmer also called on the nation to “work together for the flourishing and renewal of our country”.

According to the 2024 World Watch list, an annual report published by Open Doors, about 365 million Christians are subject to “high levels of persecution and discrimination”, and in 2023 4,998 Christians were killed for faith-related reasons.

In his Easter statement, Starmer said:

As Lent comes to an end and we move into the Easter weekend, I want to wish Christians everywhere remembering the death and celebrating the resurrection of Jesus Christ a very happy Easter.

The story of Easter is central to the Christian faith: it is a story of hope, redemption and renewal.

This Easter, as churches hold special services across the UK, and gather to celebrate with friends and family, we remember those Christians facing hardship, persecution or conflict around the world who cannot celebrate freely.

I also want to thank you for the ways in which you follow Christ’s example of love and compassion in serving your communities.

Whether through night shelters, youth clubs, toddler groups, family support, care for the elderly or chaplaincy support, and in a multitude of other ways, you demonstrate steadfast commitment and care.

We can all take inspiration from the message of Easter and continue to work together for the flourishing and renewal of our country.

BTP announces change of policy on searching trans people in custody after supreme court ruling

British Transport Police (BTP) said trans women in custody will be searched from now on by male officers, in a change to their policy in light of yesterday’s supreme court ruling. The new policy appears to apply regardless of whether the person has undertaken gender reassignment surgery.

PA Media reports a spokesperson said:

Under previous policy, we had advised that someone with a gender recognition certificate (GRC) may be searched in accordance with their acquired sex. However as an interim position while we digest yesterday’s judgement, we have advised our officers that any same sex searches in custody are to be undertaken in accordance with the biological birth sex of the detainee.

We are in the process of reviewing the implications of the ruling and will consider any necessary updates to our policies and practices in line with the law and national guidance.

PA Media reports that Rupert Lowe MP has instructed lawyers to issue letters of claim for defamation against Reform UK’s leader Nigel Farage, chair Zia Yusuf and Lee Anderson, who is the chief whip of the four-strong parliamentary group. Lowe was recently suspended from the party, shortly after he appeared to gain public support from Elon Musk to replace Farage as leader.

The Liberal Democrat, Conservative and Reform UK leaders have all been out campaigning today ahead of May’s local elections.

In Scotland, Labour’s leader Anas Sarwar has called on the Scottish government to urgently issue guidance folowing its defeat in the supreme court yesterday over the meaning of the words in the 2010 Equality Act.

While visiting Larbert, Sarwar said:

The most urgent thing that John Swinney and this SNP Government has to do is issue clear guidance that ensures that all our public services and public bodies are complying with the Equality Act and upholding people’s rights.

That is the most urgent thing they need to do. If the SNP Government does want to pursue the gender recognition reforms, then they have to come forward with what they think any changes to any future legislation needs to be, and we would consider them on their basis.

Keir Starmer has issued an Easter statement in which he asked people to remember those around the world who are not able to celebrate freely.

The prime minister said:

As Lent comes to an end and we move into the Easter weekend, I want to wish Christians everywhere remembering the death and celebrating the resurrection of Jesus Christ a very happy Easter. The story of Easter is central to the Christian faith: it is a story of hope, redemption and renewal.

This Easter, as churches hold special services across the UK, and gather to celebrate with friends and family, we remember those Christians facing hardship, persecution or conflict around the world who cannot celebrate freely.

I also want to thank you for the ways in which you follow Christ’s example of love and compassion in serving your communities. Whether through night shelters, youth clubs, toddler groups, family support, care for the elderly or chaplaincy support, and in a multitude of other ways, you demonstrate steadfast commitment and care.

We can all take inspiration from the message of Easter and continue to work together for the flourishing and renewal of our country.

The country’s largest education union will campaign in Labour MPs’ constituencies and make them “pay a high political price” if the pay offer is not improved, a union chief has warned.

Daniel Kebede, general secretary of the National Education Union (NEU), said they “stand ready” to take strike action if the government’s final pay and funding offer is not increased, PA Media reported.

In his speech to the union’s annual conference, Kebede said it was “indefensible” for a Labour government to cut school funding and he added “we expect better”.

Delegates at the NEU conference voted to launch a formal strike ballot if the final outcome of the School Teachers’ Review Body (STRB) process “remains unacceptable” – or if the government does not announce real-terms funding increases in the spending review in June.

Addressing delegates, the union chief said: “If the STRB recommendation is not above inflation, if it is not a pay award that takes a step towards a correction in pay, if it does not address the crisis in recruitment and retention, and unless it is fully funded, then we stand ready to act industrially.

“We will make Labour MPs pay a high political price through our campaigning in their constituencies, with our parents, across the country.”

Ed Davey and his team certainly have an eye for a photo opportunity. Today the Liberal Democrat leader has been campaigning in Devon, where he has cuddled a goat and been on a rollercoaster. The trip comes ahead of local elections in some areas of England. You can find our guide to the 2025 England local council elections here.

First minister John Swinney has said the SNP will “have to work incredibly hard” to retain the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse constituency in the June byelection there.

MSP Christina McKelvie held the seat from 2011 until her death last month, and Swinney said the poll was taking place in “really sad circumstances.”

He told the Daily Record’s Planet Holyrood podcast:

I don’t think by any stretch of the imagination is the byelection outcome clear. We’ll have to work incredibly hard in the SNP to retain the constituency. I’ve got to rebuild the Scottish National Party, I’m doing that step-by-step. But it’s important that we all recognise the scale of the challenge that we face in Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse.

Reform UK are holding an event in Runcorn today with their candidate for the Runcorn and Helsby byelection, Sarah Pochin. David Bull with Nigel Farage are also on the bill. That can be viewed here if you’d like.

Kemi Badenoch, the opposition leader, has criticised authorities in Hong Kong and China for not allowing Liberal Democrat MP Wera Hobhouse into Hong Kong.

Hobhouse was attempting to visit family there when she was refused entry. Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey has called for the Foreign Office to summon the Chinese ambassador over the issue.

Speaking to PA Media today while campaigning for May’s local elections in some regions of England, Badenoch said “I’ve been very vocal in my criticism of China. It is a dictatorship. It uses slave labour. Wera Hobhouse was going on a personal trip. I don’t understand the reasons why she was refused entry.”

Put to Badenoch that less than a fortnight ago she defended Israel’s decision to bar two Labour MPs, Abtisam Mohamed and Yuan Yang, from entering the country, the Conservative leader said “The two situations are different.”

On 6 April Badenoch told the BBC Israel had a right to “control its borders”, and that it was “shocking that we have MPs in Labour who other countries will not allow through, I think that’s very significant.”

At the time foreign affairs committee chair Emily Thornberry said she was “gobsmacked” by the comments, saying “You have to stand up for what’s right, Kemi Badenoch, and you should stand in solidarity with other parliamentarians.”

With regard to entry to China, Badenoch said today “so many Conservative colleagues have been sanctioned by China. They can’t go anywhere near the country. My view is that we need to really reassess our relationship with China.”

She earlier said she thought the Labour government was “too close” in its relations with China.

Badenoch: I am concerned Labour government relations with China are 'too close'

Conservative opposition leader Kemi Badenoch has said she is concerned that the Labour government might be “too close” to China.

In comments made to the PA news agency in Cambridgeshire, Badenoch said “I worry that this current government is too close to it. I think (trade minister) Douglas Alexander has been out there trying to get, you know, investment on green tech at a time when we’re trying to get China out of steel, for example, and out of critical national infrastructure. So they need a proper plan and a proper strategy. Right now, they don’t have one.”

She described a “proper” strategy as “one which ensures that where China breaks the rules, as it does on trade, that we have a proper reaction to that rather than looking away.”

She continued by saying “we need to really crack down on” on what she described as “citizens being picked up in this country, being kept in all sorts of random prisons that the Chinese embassy has set up.”

Badenoch said “We need to look again at the investments that Chinese companies are making, how many of them are actually really at the behest of the Chinese government, how much are they getting involved in national infrastructure across the board.”

Kemi Badenoch calls for broader review of equality and gender recognition laws

Opposition leader Kemi Badenoch has said she would support a broader review into equality and gender recognition laws in the wake of yesterday’s supreme court ruling.

Speaking to broadcasters during a visit to Cambridgeshire, PA Media report Badenoch said:

Biological sex is real. A gender recognition certificate is there to show that someone is now transgender, but that doesn’t change their biology.

So we need to make sure that the law is clear and the public bodies follow the law, not guidance from organisations that don’t understand it.

Asked if she thought gender recognition law should be rewritten, Badenoch, who was minister with women and equalities as her portfolio from October 2022 to July 2024, said:

I think that a review of equality acts, and the Gender Recognition Act is a good idea. These laws were written 20 years ago plus when the world was different. A lot of people are trying to change what the law means.

The supreme court has given a judgment, but I think that we need to update those laws to ensure that they are there to prevent discrimination, not for social engineering.

The Conservative leader claimed the supreme court ruling was “a vindication of so much that I fought for”.

Earlier Kishwer Falkner, chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), described yesterday’s supreme court ruling as “a victory for common sense, but only if you recognise that trans people exist. They have rights, and their rights must be respected – then it becomes a victory for common sense. It’s not a victory for an increase in unpleasant actions against trans people. We will not tolerate that.”

In delivering the judgement yesterday, Lord Hodge of the supreme court said “the unanimous decision of this court is that the terms woman and sex in the Equality Act 2010 refer to a biological woman and biological sex. But we counsel against reading this judgment as a triumph of one or more groups in our society at the expense of another. It is not.”

PA media have some figures on the amount of gender recognition certificates (GRC) that have been issued in the UK since the legal document was introduced by the Gender Recognition Act, which came into effect on 4 April 2005. That gave adults the right to legally change the sex that was recorded on their birth certificate.

During the twenty year period, a total of 8,464 full certificates had been granted, according to the latest figures from the Ministry of Justice.

The application fee for a certificate was cut in May 2021 from £140 to £5, and in July 2022 applications moved online. Both these changes occurred under the Conservative government led by Boris Johnson.

In 2023/24 – the latest year for which figures are available – 52% of certificates were granted to people whose sex at birth was recorded as male, and 48% for those who were recorded as female.

Earlier, Kishwer Falkner, the chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), said that yesterday’s supreme court ruling did not make GRCs “worthless”, but she anticipated potential court action to test their “efficacy”.

With parliament in recess, many MPs are back at their constituencies. Liberal Democrat MP for Torbay Steve Darling, alongside his guide dog Jennie, have attended the unveiling of a statue dedicated to Agatha Christie and her favourite dog, Peter. Christie was born in Torbay in 1890, and the statue is by artist Elisabeth Hadley.

Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey has renewed his calls for the Labour government to put any potential trade deal with the US Donald Trump administration before parliament.

In a statement, Davey said:

The government’s approach to this Trump trade deal has left the public completely in the dark.

The online safety of our children, our farming standards and our ability to make the likes of Elon Musk pay their fair share of tax all risk being bartered away to appease Trump. But ministers won’t even come clean on what the price of this deal with Trump could be.

It’s time for the government to publish their negotiating mandate so we can properly scrutinise this deal. The stakes are too high for parliament to be sidelined and democracy undermined.

New rules for public bodies expected ‘by summer’ after UK gender ruling

Caroline Davies has this report

Updated guidance for public bodies after the UK supreme court’s ruling that a woman is defined in law by biological sex is expected to be issued by the summer, the head of the equalities regulator said on Thursday.

Lady Kishwer Falkner, the chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, described the ruling as “enormously consequential”, telling BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “We are going to have a new statutory code of practice, statutory meaning it will be the law of the land, it will be interpreted by courts as the law of the land. We’re hoping we’re going to have that by the summer.”

She said it would give “clarity” that trans women could not participate in women’s sports or use women-only toilets or changing rooms, and the NHS must update its guidance on single-sex wards based on biological sex.

Asked if the supreme court ruling was “a victory for common sense”, she said: “Only if you recognise that trans people exist, they have rights and their rights must be respected. Then it becomes a victory for common sense.

“It’s not a victory for an increase in unpleasant actions against trans people. We will not tolerate that. We stand here to defend trans people as much as we do anyone else. So I want to make that very clear.”

Read more of Caroline Davies’ report here: New rules for public bodies expected ‘by summer’ after UK gender ruling

Yesterday’s case was brought to the supreme court by the campaign group For Women Scotland, and was against the Scottish government.

BBC Radio Scotland this morning has interviewed MSPs for their view on the decision, with Green MSP Maggie Chapman saying transgender people now fear what could happen. She told listeners:

What the judge said yesterday morning about this ruling not being taken as a victory, the response by For Women Scotland and associated groups yesterday was very, very clear.

They are taking this as a victory and I think that’s something quite potentially dangerous about where they go next.

We’ve already heard people say they want to repeal the Gender Recognition Act 2004 and trans people are worried that people are coming after their right to exist.

Conservative MSP Rachael Hamilton took a differing view. Speaking later on the programme, PA Media reports she said:

For Women Scotland of course believe this is a victory, because they had to go to the supreme court to fight this. I listened to what Maggie Chapman said, I don’t believe this is a culture war and I don’t believe that this will stoke hatred. This just brings clarity to single-sex spaces.

As my colleague Archie Bland noted in the First Edition newsletter this morning, the actual voices of trans people have been few and far between in a lot of the commentary on yesterday’s supreme court decision, and indeed in the evidence-gathering that went into it.

ITV’s Good Morning Britain did speak to Ella Morgan, who explained her fears about healthcare settings. She told the programme:

In the middle of filming I was admitted into hospital for a problem, and I was so scared that they would know who I am – not being big-headed – and that they would put me in a male ward.

I was put on a female ward, and but I had my own room, purely because there wasn’t enough space for me with, you know, within the group.

You know, I will still continue to use a female toilet. I still see myself as a woman and always will, whether this legislation comes in and people agree with it or not.

Speaking on the BBC Radio 4 Today programme, the chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) said it will pursue the NHS if it does not change existing guidance on the treatment of trans women patients.

Current guidelines say trans people should be accommodated in single-sex accommodation according to their gender identity, rather than their assigned sex at birth. Kishwer Falkner told listeners “They have to change it. They now have clarity. We will be having conversations with them to update that guidance.”

Updated

The chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) has suggested that there may be legal challenges around the efficacy of gender recognition certificates (GRC) ahead.

Asked on the BBC Radio 4 Today programme if yesterday’s supreme court ruling had rendered the legal document worthless, Kishwer Falkner said:

I think the next stage of litigation may well be tests as to the efficacy of the GRC, and or other areas. We don’t believe they are [worthless]. We think they’re quite important.

But I think there will be other areas, I mean, the Government is thinking of digital IDs, and if digital IDs come in, then what documentation will provide the identity of that person? So it’s going to be a space that we’ll have to watch very carefully as we go on.

EHRC chair: supreme court ruling 'victory for common sense, but only if you recognise trans people exist'

Kishwer Falkner, chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), has described yesterday’s supreme court ruling as “a victory for common sense, but only if you recognise that trans people exist.”

Speaking on the BBC Radio 4 Today programme, Falkner said:

It’s a victory for common sense, but only if you recognise that trans people exist. They have rights, and their rights must be respected – then it becomes a victory for common sense.

It’s not a victory for an increase in unpleasant actions against trans people. We will not tolerate that. We stand here to defend trans people as much as we do anyone else. So I want to make that very clear.

She stressed that trans people are still protected by law regarding gender reassignment and sex discrimination, telling listeners:

They are covered through gender reassignment … and they’re also covered by sex discrimination.

We’ll have to flesh this out in the reasoning, but I think if you were to have an equal pay claim, then depending on which aspect of it that it was, you could use sex discrimination legislation.

If a trans person was fired, lost their employment because they happen to be trans, that would be unlawful, still absolutely unlawful, and we stand ready to support those people and those claims.

My colleague Archie Bland has this to say in the opening of today’s First Edition newsletter, which has its focus on yesterday’s supreme court ruling:

The supreme court’s judgment was 88 pages long, but in much of the coverage today it has been boiled down to a very blunt conclusion: “The concept of sex is binary”, and as far as equality legislation is concerned, trans women are not women.

That is an oversimplification of a complex ruling yesterday that was careful to say it did not seek to delegitimise the existence of trans people, and insisted it did not represent the triumph of one group over another.

Whatever the court says, though, gender-critical campaigners and many newspaper front pages were clear: this constituted “victory”. Marion Calder, a director of For Women Scotland, said: “If there is a female sign on the door, that is now a single-sex space. That is crystal clear as a result of today’s ruling.”

The decision was meanwhile greeted with deep trepidation and dismay by many trans people, who wondered how such a verdict had been reached without the evidence of a single trans woman being heard by the court.

There have been sensible warnings against over-interpreting the ruling – but there is little doubt that it will have lasting consequences.

You can read more from Archie Bland on the subject here: Thursday briefing – ​what a landmark supreme court ruling on biological sex does – and doesn’t – mean

Updated

Shadow chancellor Mel Stride has highlighted the recent report by the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW) which suggested business confidence in the UK has dipped severely.

In a post to social media, the recently knighted MP said:

I take no pleasure in the ICAEW’s latest survey, which reveals UK business confidence has slipped into negative territory for the first three months of 2025, thanks to Labour’s anti-business budget.

Tax burden tops the list of concerns for the second quarter in a row, with 56% of businesses saying it’s their greatest challenge. Red tape follows closely, with 43% of companies reporting increased strain. Rising costs and wage pressures continue to squeeze profits, with investment growth remaining sluggish.

Stride added “The full report makes for uncomfortable reading for the Labour chancellor.”

Supreme court ruling 'enormously consequential', says chair of Equality and Human Rights Commission

The chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) has described yesterday’s ruling by the supreme court over gender recognition and biological sex as “enormously consequential”.

She told listeners of the BBC Radio 4 Today programme “The ruling is enormously consequential, and it does bring clarity, that is undoubtedly the case. It’s a very readable judgment, and organisations should be taking care to read it and to understand that it does bring clarity, helps them decide what they should do.”

With regard to single-sex spaces, she said:

Single-sex services like changing rooms must be based on biological sex. If a male person is allowed to use a women-only service or facility, it isn’t any longer single-sex, then it becomes a mixed-sex space.

But I have to say, there’s no law that forces organisations, service providers, to provide a single-sex space, and there is no law against them providing a third space, an additional space, such as unisex toilets, for example, or changing rooms.

There isn’t any law saying that you cannot use a neutral third space, and they [trans rights organisations] should be using their powers of advocacy to ask for those third spaces.

Falkner said, though, the ruling made it clear that people assigned male at birth cannot take part in women’s sport.

Updated

The co-leader of the Green party of England and Wales, Carla Denyer, has accused the government of treating asylum seekers as “like pawns on a chess board.”

Responding to reports that the UK and France are in discussions about a possible migrant return deal, the MP for Bristol Central said:

The government is treating human beings like pawns on a chess board, indifferent to the human suffering caused by this inhumane system. Keeping someone apart from their family, who they’re entitled to join in the UK, as a negotiation tactic, is heartbreaking.

Government needs to instead step up and offer safe and legal routes to pull the rug from the illegal people smugglers. As it stands, many of those with legitimate asylum claims have no legitimate way of reaching the UK – this intolerable situation cannot be allowed to continue.

Health minister Karin Smyth has said there had been “a lot of ill-informed and often quite offensive debate” in recent years around gender and biological sex.

Asked about direct implications of the ruling for where people would be placed on wards in the NHS, she told viewers of ITV’s Good Morning Britain programme:

I think your key word there is compromise. We’ve seen a lot of ill-informed and often quite offensive debate over recent years.

I think that this ruling, clarifying that tin he Equality Act that parliament intended, that sex means biological sex, and that other people with other characteristics are also protected, is welcome. And I hope that compromise, working together, is absolutely the order of the day.

We need to move forward. I think the whole country is generally very supportive of individual rights. We’re a very tolerant society. We do want clarity around the law, and that’s what we’ve received yesterday. So moving forward … making sure we work together to protect all rights.

Smyth said that there was a public misconception about NHS institutions having large wards where people were forced to mingle, saying it was not everywhere, but that “most people don’t see the inside of a hospital ward when they encounter the NHS and where they do, many of those areas have single sex rooms anyway.”

She said she expected “transgender people … also have their dignity and privacy respected” in healthcare settings.

In the judgement delivered yesterday, Lord Hodge said “the unanimous decision of this court is that the terms woman and sex in the Equality Act 2010 refer to a biological woman and biological sex. But we counsel against reading this judgment as a triumph of one or more groups in our society at the expense of another. It is not.”

Tories call for legislation to codify supreme court gender ruling in law

The shadow paymaster general has welcomed the supreme court rulling yesterday on gender recognition, and called for the government to codify it in law to protect the decision against future court action.

Speaking to GB News, Richard Holden, hailed it as “a very sensible ruling”, and was at pains to point out that it echoed concerns that had been in the Conservative manifesto at the 2024 general election.

He told viewers:

I think it’s a very sensible ruling. It’s something which was in the Conservative manifesto the last general election that we would ensure that the Equality Act in legislation would be defined properly as biological women. That’s exactly what we would have done. The court seems to have done it for us.

I hope that the government reinforces that with legislation as well as we would do, but I think it’s a victory for common sense. I think that now that guidance is going to be absolutely crucial, and they have to get it right on this to ensure that single sex spaces can protect women.

I still think that, rather than relying purely on a court judgment, actually, we should also go further and ensure that is enshrined in legislation like we proposed in the Conservative manifesto too. Belt and braces it. Because I don’t want a court in future to change its mind in this area, although I think the unanimous ruling of the supreme court gives a very clear sense of direction and actually really helps people as well to understand what the thinking is around biological sex.

Minister hopes supreme court ruling on gender will 'draw a line' under debate

A minister has said she hopes the outcome of the supreme court’s ruling on the legal definition of the term woman will draw a line under arguments over gender recognition.

Asked if she welcomed the ruling, health minister Karin Smyth told Sky News: “Yes. I think it’s good that we have clarity for women, and the women who brought this case, and for service providers providing services.”

Asked whether she thought the ruling would further inflame arguments, the minister said: “No, I really hope that it does draw a line under it by clarifying what sex means, by clarifying that people have different protected rights under the Equality Act and being very clear to all organisations what that means.”

Questioned on what she would say to trans people worried about the ruling, Smyth said:

Rights remain enshrined in the Equality Act. There are protected characteristics for trans people under the gender recognition part of the Equality Act.

If there are changes to be made, that needs to be looked at carefully with the guidance, but this law was about women’s rights and rights under the Equality Act for [biological] sex, and for service providers making sure they are compliant with that.

Updated

Welcome and opening summary …

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling UK politics coverage for Thursday. Here are your headlines …

  • Health minister Karin Smyth has said she hopes the outcome of the supreme court’s ruling on the legal definition of the term woman will draw a line under arguments over gender recognition

  • Shadow cabinet member Richard Holden called for the government to pass legislation to codify the judgement in

  • Ministers are having an “active conversation” with UK pharmaceutical firms about the potential impact of US tariffs

  • People are being warned of Easter disruption to the rail network, with over 300 engineering works being undertaken. National Highways said it has removed roadworks from 1,127 miles of motorways and major A roads in England

It is Martin Belam with you again today. You can reach me at martin.belam@theguardian.com if you have spotted typos or what you consider to be errors or omissions.

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