Nicola Sturgeon responds to JK Rowling’s ‘destroyer of women’s rights’ T-shirt

Picture: Lisa Ferguson/JK Rowling Twitter

Nicola Sturgeon has insisted people should “try to treat each other with respect” after JK Rowling wore a T-shirt calling the First Minister a “destroyer of women’s rights”.

By Alistair Grant

The author tweeted a picture of herself wearing the garment on Thursday as she gave her backing to a protest outside the Scottish Parliament over controversial gender recognition legislation.

The T-shirt read: “Nicola Sturgeon: Destroyer of women’s rights.”

Ms Rowling tweeted: “I stand in solidarity with @ForWomenScot and all women protesting and speaking outside the Scottish Parliament. #NoToSelfID.”

It came as a majority of MSPs on Holyrood’s equalities, human rights and civil justice committee recommended the general principles of the Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill should be approved.

The legislation aims to make it easier for transgender people to be legally recognised as their preferred gender.Supporters say the move will streamline a process many find distressing, but critics have raised concerns self-identification will undermine women’s sex-based rights, such as access to women-only spaces.

Asked about Ms Rowling’s tweet, Ms Sturgeon told BBC Radio’s Good Morning Scotland programme: “People are entitled to express their views, and their entitled to express their views in whatever way they think is fit.

“I’ve always thought, on this issue, where people have very strong views, we should all try to treat each other with respect, and that’s what I will continue to do.”

Ms Sturgeon said the current gender recognition process is “degrading and traumatic”.

She said: “This Bill is about reforming an existing process that is degrading and traumatic for trans people, seeking to make it less traumatic for those who want to legally change their gender.

“It doesn’t give any additional rights to trans people, nor does it take any rights away from women.”

She added: “It’s men who attack women and we need to focus on that, not on further stigmatising and discriminating against a tiny group in our society who are already one of the most stigmatised.”

The First Minister said she is a “passionate, lifelong feminist”.

She said: “Any man who seeks to abuse the law on gender recognition for nefarious purposes would be committing a criminal offence under the proposed Bill that’s before the Scottish Parliament.

“It’s right to make a degrading and traumatic process simpler for trans people, and to make sure their are protections for anybody who would seek to exploit that legislation.”

Source: Nicola Sturgeon responds to JK Rowling’s ‘destroyer of women’s rights’ T-shirt

JK Rowling: from magic to the heart of a Twitter storm

The author of the Harry Potter books now finds controversy raging around her in the press and social media that began with one tweet on gender rights

A simple story with a happy ending, with evil unmasked and defeated, has great appeal, especially if there are grim threats and obstacles to negotiate along the way.

For two decades JK Rowling has not only delighted readers with this sort of tale, but also stood as living proof of triumph over adversity, having written her children’s books hopefully, inside that Edinburgh cafe, in an effort both to keep warm and to earn a new life for herself and her baby daughter.

Now, Rowling’s legions of admirers are waking up to the complications of the real world, one where no individual is safe from re-evaluation, and context is all. Continue reading

JK Rowling to share first two chapters of new novel today

JK Rowling has announced on social media that she’ll be sharing the first two chapters of her forthcoming new book, The Ickabog, at 3pm today (Tuesday, 26 May).

Chapter 1

King Fred the Fearless

Once upon a time, there was a tiny country called Cornucopia, which had been ruled for centuries by a long line of fair-haired kings. The king at the time of which I write was called King Fred the Fearless. He’d announced the ‘Fearless’ bit himself, on the morning of his coronation, partly because it sounded nice with ‘Fred’, but also because he’d once managed to catch and kill a wasp all by himself, if you didn’t count five footmen and the boot boy [ . . . ]

JK Rowling “The Ickabog

Continue reading chapter 1-2

Backlash after JK Rowling supports woman fired for transgender comments

JK Rowling has come out in support of a researcher sacked in a landmark case after tweeting transgender people cannot change their biological sex.

Maya Forstater lost her job in March after she posted tweets opposing government proposals to reform the Gender Recognition Act to allow people to identify as the opposite sex.

Ms Forstater, 45, who worked as a tax expert at the Centre for Global Development, an international think tank campaigning against poverty and inequality, took her case to an employment tribunal on the grounds her dismissal was discrimination against her beliefs.

Employment Judge James Tayler dismissed her claim saying her views are “absolutist in her view of sex” and “incompatible with human dignity and fundamental rights of others.”

Responding to the ruling, Harry Potter author Rowling tweeted: “Dress however you please. Call yourself whatever you like. Sleep with any consenting adult who’ll have you.

“Live your best life in peace and security. But force women out of their jobs for stating that sex is real?”

She added the hashtags #IStandWithMaya and #ThisIsNotADrill.

Rowling’s name trended on Twitter prompting debate.

Many people claimed Rowling is a “transphobe”, and the phrase “JK Rowling is a Terf” – referring to the term trans-exclusionary radical feminist – also trended on the platform.

A Terf describes feminists expressing ideas other feminists consider transphobic, including trans women are not women.

However, others welcomed the author’s comment, with many joining her in using the hashtag #IStandWithMaya.

Olympic gold medal winning swimmer Sharron Davies, MBE, tweeted: “The Sex we are Is a biological reality. A scientific fact. Where as Gender today is a social construct, an ideology, a feeling, totally changeable. I believe we cannot change sex but can Live happily expressing ourselves outside of any stereotypes.

Ms Forstater has raised £83,000 via crowdfunding for her legal fees and is considering appealing the judgement.

Judge Tayler concluded Ms Forstater was not entitled to ignore the legal rights of a transgender person and the “enormous pain that can be caused by misgendering a person”.

The dispute was a test case on whether a “gender critical” view – a belief there are only two biological sexes – is a protected “philosophical belief” under the 2010 Equality Act.

Ms Forstater argued “framing the question of transgender inclusion as an argument that male people should be allowed into women’s spaces discounts women’s rights to privacy and is fundamentally illiberal (it is like forcing Jewish people to eat pork)”.

Source: Backlash after JK Rowling supports woman fired for transgender comments – The Scotsman