Teaching children they can be born in the ‘wrong’ body is harmful, British-Nigerian politician, Kemi Badenoch warns after UK Govt issues new trans guidance for schools


By / December 20th, 2023
0737070be848fde120370f78d2779f32Y29udGVudHNlYXJjaGFwaSwxNjgxNzQ4ODU0 2.71463161 scaled
0737070be848fde120370f78d2779f32Y29udGVudHNlYXJjaGFwaSwxNjgxNzQ4ODU0 2.71463161 scaled

Teaching children they can be born in the 'wrong' body is harmful, British-Nigerian politician, Kemi Badenoch warns after UK Govt issues new trans guidance for schools

 

British-Nigerian politician, Kemi Badenoch has warned that teaching children they can be born in the wrong body is ‘harmful’.

Kemi, who serving as  Secretary of State for Business and Trade in the UK, spoke out after the Government launched a long-awaited crackdown on the spread of ‘contested and confused’ gender ideology in schools.

She said the worst of the ‘toxic’ debate over trans rights has been played out in classrooms, with parents shut out as pupils have changed their names and uniforms.

 

Writing in the Daily Mail, Mrs Badenoch pledges that guidelines published yesterday will protect young people and provide teachers with much-needed clarity.

 

She also vowed to fight for free speech, saying those who seek to ‘force’ terminology on others, compelling them to follow an ideology, show a lack of tolerance.

Mrs Badenoch admits the guidance will be opposed by activist groups who are already telling schools to ignore it. And she insists to frustrated Tory colleagues that tougher action could not be taken without time-consuming new laws.

 

‘Unlike the opposition Labour Party, this Government does not duck the hard questions or the difficult issues. Teachers and school leaders have been asking for guidance in this space and today they have it,’ she writes.

‘And with it we hope our children will be better protected as schools navigate this fast-developing, and contentious, set of issues.’

In her Mail article, Mrs Badenoch tells how the idea that children can be born in the wrong body and have an gender identity separate from biological sex has ‘swept through our schools’ in recent years.

Teaching children they can be born in the 'wrong' body is harmful, British-Nigerian politician, Kemi Badenoch warns after UK Govt issues new trans guidance for schools

She writes: ‘This is a contested and confused ideology. The truth is it is impossible to define gender identity without reinforcing gender norms and stereotypes associated with either sex. It is not a term that exists in law.

‘And yet, this ideology has swept through our schools, causing concern amongst well-meaning parents and teachers alike who want to do right by the children in their care.’

 

She continues: ‘Teaching children that you can be born in the ‘wrong’ body is harmful. Teachers and carers should be reminded that just because a child does not conform to stereotypes associated with being a girl or a boy, that does not mean they should be put on a path to medical or social transition.’

 

She says the debate became ‘toxic’ as it was ‘hijacked by special interest groups’, adding: ‘We have seen the worst of this played out in our schools.

‘Parents have felt excluded from important decisions being made about their children. Primary school children have been led to believe they are born in the wrong body, simply because they don’t feel that they conform.

‘Girls have been told to play competitive sports, silently accepting that boys can say they identify as girls and rob girls of the safe, fair competition they deserve.’

 

The non-statutory guidance, entitled ‘Gender Questioning Children’, is underpinned by five principles: that schools must safeguard all children; must be respectful; should not exclude parents; have legal duties related to pupils’ biological sex; and do not have a duty to allow children to socially transition.

 

Instead, they must ‘allow for watchful waiting’ when a child asks to change gender and take into account ‘the seriousness and context of the request’.

 

The guidance will now be put out to a 12-week consultation. Downing Street said schools should ‘take heed’ of it immediately – but teaching unions said they did not need to change their policies yet.

 


Learn How To Download

Discover more from NaijaWide

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

SPONSORED CONTENT:

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.