20 February 2004
The Second Reading debate in the House of Commons on the Gender
Recognition Bill will be on 23 February 2004. The Bill resolves a serious
legal anomaly, by providing legal recognition for the UKs 5000 transsexual people
who have undergone a change of gender. The UK is one of only four countries in the
whole of Europe not to already have some legal mechanism for recognizing change of sex:
the others are Andorra, Albania and Ireland.
The Gender Recognition Bill is the product of several years work
by the Department for Constitutional Affairs, which has consulted widely with
stakeholders.
The following briefing giving more information on the Bill has
been sent on a cross party basis to all MPs with a parliamentary email address from:
LYNNE JONES MP (Lab)
SHAUN
WOODWARD MP (Lab)
ANDREW
MITCHELL MP (Con)
EVAN
HARRIS MP (Lib Dem)
What the Bill does
The Gender
Recognition Bill provides legal recognition for people who have undergone a change of
gender; transsexual people. It includes measures to protect the privacy of those who have
changed gender, and safeguards to protect the rights of third parties.
The Bill
does not include new anti-discrimination measures.
Who are transsexual people
There are
about 5,000 people in the UK who have
undergone a medical process known as gender reassignment. Of these, about 70% are male-to-female
transsexual people (or trans women), and 30% are female-to-male or
(trans men).
It is
important to note that the Bill does not create transsexual people; it offers legal
recognition to those who have already taken decisive steps to change their gender. The process of gender reassignment is
internationally recognized as a medical procedure, and has a proven track record of
success for the small number of people for whom it is medically necessary.
Why this bill is needed
Transsexual
people live and function in society in the gender to which they have been reassigned. However, because the UK has not so
far legally recognized this change, they face conflicts between the reality of their lives
and their anomalous legal status. For example,
a transsexual man may not currently marry a woman, which leaves transsexual people without
legal security for their families.
The privacy
of transsexual people is also routinely breached, because although some official
documentation (passports, driving licence etc) is changed, their birth certificates are
not. This requires transsexual people to
reveal their history whenever a birth certificate must be presented, and also requires
them to disclose their status when legal sex is at issue, such as when applying for
certain jobs or seeking insurance or pensions.
How the bill works
The Gender
Recognition Bill establishes panels which will review the evidence submitted by
applicants. This will include medical evidence
of treatment undergone, and evidence that the change of gender is permanent.
Successful
applicants will receive a Gender Recognition Certificate, which recognises
their change of gender for all legal purposes. Those
born in the UK will also
receive a new birth certificate.
Frequently-asked questions
1.
Isnt
sex determined at birth, and defined by chromosomes?
In most
cases, yes. But chromosomes are not always an
accurate predictor of gender, and there are many possible variations and anomalies, as
Lord Winston explained to the House of Lords (Lords Hansard 3 Feb 2004 : Column 619). Transsexual people are amongst the small minority
whose medical circumstances do not neatly fit the notion of chromosomal determinism.
2.
How does the privacy
protection work?
Clause 22 of the Bill creates a new criminal offence for unauthorised disclosure of the fact that a person
holds a Gender Recognition Certificate, if that information was acquired in an
official capacity. There is no prohibition on
gossip, and there is no offence unless the information is disclosed. The Bill lists situations in which disclosure is
legal.
3.
What will
happen to the original birth record?
It will
remain unchanged, and a new record will be created. Any
person in possession of the relevant details may apply for a copy of either record.
However, the link between the old and new records will be kept secret so that (for
example) an application for a copy of the new birth record will reveal neither the
existence of a previous record nor any link to it.
4.
Does the
issue of a new birth certificate not undermine the integrity of the historical record?
No: the
original record will remain intact, and copies will continue to be publicly available. Similar provisions for the creation of a new birth
record exist for those whose parents were not married at time of birth, and for adopted
children.
5.
What about
those who object on religious grounds?
The
major faiths have varied views on transsexual people, and most are accepting. However, churches and other religious bodies remain
free at law to exclude transsexual people if they wish the bill includes no new
anti-discrimination measures. Since Anglican
churches have a legal duty to marry eligible persons, the Bill includes a specific
conscience clause to allow ministers to refuse those who they reasonably
believe to be transsexual. No similar
exemption is provided for other denominations, because it is unnecessary: other
denominations have no legal duty to conduct marriages.
6.
Are churches entitled
to check whether someone is transsexual, e.g. before marrying them?
No. Churches have no general power to check on
the status of potential members or those who want to marry.
There are many grounds on which churches may reject a potential member or
refuse to conduct a marriage, and these vary between the different faiths (for example,
some churches refuse marriage to divorcees or to people who do not regularly worship at
that church). In each case, the church or
religious body is entitled to refuse membership or marriage if it cannot satisfy itself
about the issue in question but has no special power to access official records.
7.
Do church
ministers risk being fined?
A fine can only be imposed on successful prosecution for unauthorised disclosure of a
persons transsexual history. Ministers
routinely handle deeply personal and confidential information about their parishioners. Due respect for confidentiality is an essential
part of their role, and no change would be required to existing good practice.
8.
How will
this affect investigation of crimes?
Clause 22, subsection 4(f) provides an explicit exemption to the privacy protection, to
allow disclosure for the purpose of preventing or investigating crime. Subsection (5) provides further powers for the
Secretary of State to prescribe circumstances in which disclosure is permitted. The Criminal Records Bureau already has in place
procedures for transsexual people, which ensure that full access to criminal records is
maintained.
9.
What about
sport?
Clause 18
provides sporting bodies with flexibility to deal with the issues raised by transsexual
competitors. This clause was inserted in The
House of Lords, after peers raised concerns that the exemptions in Section 44 of the Sex
Discrimination Act might not be sufficiently clear.
Contacts and Information
·
Press For
Change, campaign group for transsexual people: tel: 01274 424 500
(Claire McNab)
http://www.pfc.org.uk
click for email
·
The Gender
Recognition Division, Dept For Constitutional Affairs: tel: 020 7210 8205
http://www.dca.gov.uk/constitution/transsex/
·
Parliamentary
Forum on Transsexualism, Lynne Jones MP
http://www.
lynnejones.org.uk/transsex.htm
click for email
Party Spokespeople
·
David Lammy
MP, Labour
·
Tim Boswell
MP, Conservative
·
Evan Harris
MP, Liberal Democrats
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