Scotland’s First Minister has said he does not regret voting for his Government’s controversial gender recognition reforms.
John Swinney said the Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill was “the product of careful consideration” and scrutiny by MSPs.
On Tuesday, Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar and his deputy Dame Jackie Baillie U-turned on their support for the legislation.
The Bill was passed overwhelmingly in Holyrood by 86 votes to 39 in 2022 but was later blocked by the then-Conservative UK government, which said it violated equality laws.
The legislation aimed to simplify the process trans people go through to get a gender recognition certificate in their acquired gender.
It introduced self-identification without a medical diagnosis as part of the reforms.
Opponents of self-ID policies point to high-profile cases such as the NHS Fife employment tribunal, which came after a female nurse was disciplined after complaining about sharing a changing room with a trans doctor.
Asked whether he still backs the legislation, Swinney told reporters in Glasgow: “I do not regret my support from the GRR Bill.
“It was a product of careful consideration by the Scottish Government in terms of the formulation of the legislation.
“It was a subject of very, very, very extensive parliamentary consideration of the legislation.
“I think what it was an attempt to do was to try to improve the circumstances of a very small minority in our country, in the trans community, and to make life a bit easier for them.
“That was the purpose of the legislation, and that was why I was happy to support it.”
It comes after the leader of Scottish Labour said he “regrets” his party’s support for the Bill, saying he would have opposed it “knowing what we know now”.
Sarwar made the U-turn while expressing his support for Sandie Peggie, the nurse at the centre of the Fife tribunal.
She objected to sharing a female changing room with Dr Beth Upton, a transgender doctor. She also reportedly faces a separate conduct hearing for allegedly misgendering Dr Upton.
“No nurse should ever face disciplinary action for refusing to share a changing room,” Sarwar said.
He said Scottish Labour supports single-sex spaces based on biological sex, telling the Holyrood Sources podcast: “If we are going to stop falling into divisive culture war politics, and we are going to make progress as a nation, we have got to say, quite clearly, we support single-sex spaces based on biological sex, we respect the Equality Act.”
During his visit to Glasgow’s Botanic Gardens on Wednesday, the First Minister refused to comment on the ongoing tribunal.
He said: “There’s a live case going on in NHS Fife, and I am just not going to talk about the details of that live case because it’s wrong for the First Minister to comment on live cases that are under way.
“I, therefore, quite understand why the Government said that there was not a statement to be made yesterday to Parliament on the NHS Fife case because it’s a live case, and it is subjudice.”
The Conservatives have rejected the subjudice argument by the First Minister, accusing him of “moral cowardice” for choosing not to issue a statement on single-sex spaces.
Tess White, a Tory MSP and critic of gender self-ID policies, said: “The situation that has arisen in NHS Fife speaks volumes about what is happening behind closed doors in Scotland’s public sector under this SNP Government.
“Women are watching today. The public have had enough of the recent abdication, obfuscation and moral cowardice from this Government.”
Follow STV News on WhatsApp
Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country
