
British Conservative Party head Kemi Badenoch suggested that after the Supreme Court ruling, companies should require transgender personnel and clients to use disabled toilets.
The Conservative leader said it would be a cost-effective alternative to establishing new gender-neutral facilities after the court prevents transgender people from using toilets that match their determined gender.
Badenoch appeared in Good Morning in England to discuss the court’s judgment that declared that the words “woman” and “sex” in the “Equality Act” refer to biological definitions. The ruling is interpreted as meaning that trans women who are biologically male but considered female can be excluded from female spaces like toilets and locker rooms.
Badennock said the situation was “not as complicated as often said.” When asked whether trans people should have separate toilet facilities, she explained that most organizations already have solutions. “Almost all businesses I’ve seen have toilets disabled. They are neutral, unlike gender neutral. Transgender people can use these,” she said. “If you provide a single space, it has to be a single space.”
She stressed that this approach would avoid the financial burden of businesses that build new facilities for trans people.
Badenoch also said the problem was not created by trans people themselves, but by “predatory men who use loose rules to claim themselves as women and enter women’s restrooms.” She noted that regulations on toilets had been issued two years ago, although many people laughed at the move at the time.
Meanwhile, a senior minister confirmed that the use of toilets and locker rooms will be banned by civil servants and public sector workers to be consistent with the identified gender. Pat McFadden said the government will follow the guidance of the Equal and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), but acknowledged that there will be no initiative, saying: “There will be no bathroom police.”
The British Supreme Court ruling during Easter reiterated that the “women” and “sex” in the Equality Act refer to biological women and biology. The EHRC has released new guidance to clarify that schools must provide single-sex change facilities for boys and girls over the age of eight. It noted that for trans students, appropriate alternative clauses may be required, but trans girls should not be allowed to use girls’ facilities, and trans boys (biological girls) should not use boys’ facilities.
Additionally, the EHRC Guidelines explain that sports clubs and associations with 25 or more members are legally limited to biology men or women, for example, lesbian women sports clubs should not recognize trans women. Regulators are developing detailed codes of practice based on the Supreme Court ruling, aiming to submit it to the government for approval by June.