Charlie Falconer Profile picture
Jan 17, 2023 19 tweets 3 min read Read on X
The s35 Statement of Reasons has now been published. It identifies 3 sets of reasons why the Sec of State considers the GRR Bill would have an adverse effect on the operation of reserved matter law namely equal opportunities.
First because the Scottish GRC will only be recognised in Scotland and therefore someone could be one gender in Scotland and another in the rest of the UK. This could lead to administrative difficulties for example in the administration of benefits.
The administrative difficulties obviously have to be balanced against the benefits to be obtained to the trans community in having much easier access to GRCs. The level of administrative difficulty will depend on the increase number of Scottish GRCs being issued.
Scottish Ministers estimated there would be an annual increase from 30 to 250/300. SOS says the figure is uncertain but that the country with the closest system to the GRR has an average of 550 per year. Even taking the figure of 550 the administrative difficulties are minimal.
In any event that is The nuclear option of s35 couldn’t reasonably be triggered by the administrative inconvenience (which would be unlikely to apply in most cases) of having special files for 525 people’s benefit records.
The second category of adverse effects in the statement of reasons is said to be increased risk of fraudulent applications. The process is easier so the risk of fraudulent or malign applications is increased.
But in the context of 525 additional applications, the vast majority of those are likely to be genuine.
The authorities can monitor applications and the Chief Constable is able to inform the Registrar General of any person in respect of who they make a sexual protection order application so the RG will not grant them a GRC, the risk of fraud does not possibly justify s35
The Statement of Reasons (at p.7) identifies particular concern about bad actors being able to get a GRC and then try to circumvent safe space teas exclusions set up legitimately under the Equality Act.
But the fact that a person has a GRC does not prevent their exclusion from a safe space. Those providing safe spaces will be aware of the conditions for a Scottish GRC. They can require more protections from those with Scottish GRCs if appropriate.
The final category of adverse effects in the Statement of Reasons is said to be in relation to the operation of the Equality Act, four of which effects are said to already exist but will be made worse, and one (the effect on admissions to single sex schools) is said to be new.
On the 4 effects said to be made worse the only one of any real significance is the one concerning associations. There is no exclusion within the Equality Act which would allow a single sex association to exclude a person with
a GRC from membership of the association. Already associations such as those which provide support for women victims of sexual violence would be guilty of gender assignment discrimination if they refused membership to biological man with GRC making her legally a woman.
The possibility of some proportion of the extra 525 applicants seeking to join such an association seems an utterly unsustainable basis for s35
Finally the new asserted adverse effect under the Equality Act namely the effect on Single Sex Schools. A single sex school in Scotland could not refuse entry to a person with a GRC in the gender of the school.
The school could refuse entry if separately from gender reassignment there were grounds for refusal. This obviously will only apply to people of school age.
It will effect probably a very small proportion of the 525 - those of 18 and under who might want to go to a single sex school who were suitable for selection. And on what basis should that cohort be refused entry?
If they had some malign intent they would not be eligible. If they were eligible they shouldn’t be discriminated against.
The Statement of Reasons di not justify the use of s35

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More from @LordCFalconer

Mar 9, 2023
Johnson, Truss and Sunak regard compliance with law as optional. They are dangerously undermining the UK’s fundamental commitment to the rule of law. Once that commitment is lost, the most fundamental check on government has gone.
The Northern Irish protocol Bill broke the legal commitments the UK govt had made in the Withdrawal Treaty with the EU, and subsequently incorporated into domestic law. The ‘necessity’ defence was, as every international law expert acknowledged, laughable (Braverman was AG).
The EU Retained Law Bill fundamentally breaches the rule of law by because it repeals thousands of regulations with no-one aware which regs are being repealed. The rule of law depends on people knowing what the law is.
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Jan 22, 2023
Central to the disagreement between Holyrood and the UK Government on Gender Recognition is the extent to which self identification as the basis of a Gender Recognition Certificate puts women and girls at risk from predators.
@KemiBadenoch in her interview in Saturday’s Times identifies that risk as central to the blocking of the Bill. Opponents of the Bill argue that since it permits a GRC to be obtained on the say so of the Applicant it makes fraud and therefore predatory behaviour easier.
It does make fraud in obtaining the certificate easier, but Equality Law has carefully ensured that holding a GRC is not the key to whether a trans woman has access to a women only space which is the place it is feared a predator might go.
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Aug 18, 2021
The risk to the Afghan judges from the Taliban is real and immediate. This thread sets out an email the Bar Council has forwarded to me and others from an Afghan judge.
I came to read your plea to the UK government for protecting the Afghan judges who are in grave danger right now in Afghanistan. I am a young Afghan judge and extend my gratitude for this kind gesture of yours and appreciate your efforts.
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Jul 28, 2021
Therese Coffey, this morning, didn’t deny PM was a systematic liar. She dismissed the allegation as trivia. Which explains why govt is so hopeless on all areas of domestic policy. Ministers have nothing to fear whether corrupt, hopeless or dishonest. There are no standards.
PM regarded Hancock as f******hopeless. Hancock misled the PM and Cab Sec on whether people who were discharged from hospital to care homes had been tested negative , he falsely blamed the Treasury and the NHS for the PPE problem,
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Jul 13, 2021
The government today just amended an absolute duty on it contained in an Act of Parliament by a motion in the Commons. They did not amend the Act. They simply used their Commons majority to override the law.
The law is now contained not in the Act of Parliament but in a Written Ministerial Statement of the Treasury which overrides the Act and is probably enforceable by judicial review.
The government have turned the supremacy of Parliament which has conventionally meant supremacy expressed by legislation into supremacy expressed through government motion. This means in practice the supremacy of the executive.
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Aug 20, 2020
Nick Gibbs, Schools Minister said Dept of Education worked very closely with Ofqual in developing A level and GCSE results model. He defended the direction SoS gave to Ofqual (on 31/3) as lawful, but specifically declined to defend the Ofqual model as lawful. Significant.
The direction was the very beginning of the process and was not itself unlawful. It was the model they developed together which was unlawful in 3 respects.
1. For many students it did not purport to assess the individual’s attainment, but instead relied primarily on the performance of their school or college in previous years, in breach of Ofqual’s statutory duty to have a system which assessed the individual’s attainment.
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