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Dozens of Labour MPs warn of chaos for firms over gender recognition advice

about 14 hours ago
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Dozens of Labour MPs have written to ministers warning that upcoming regulations on how to implement rules on gender recognition could cause chaos for many businesses.In a private letter to the business secretary, Peter Kyle, the MPs said they had been contacted by large numbers of companies that were deeply alarmed at the implications of the guidance, citing significant potential costs and a “minefield” of competing legal rights.Ministers are still considering the final guidance, drafted by the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), so it is not yet public.Sources at the watchdog, however, have briefed that it is broadly similar to interim advice issued shortly after April’s landmark supreme court ruling that sex in the Equality Act refers only to biological sex.The interim advice, which was withdrawn last week, said the supreme court ruling meant transgender people should not be allowed to use toilets meant for the gender they live as, and that in some cases they could not use toilets consistent with their birth sex.

Transgender groups and some MPs expressed alarm at the advice, saying it would in effect exclude trans people from much of the public realm.The Council of Europe’s commissioner for human rights subsequently wrote to UK MPs cautioning against the possible “widespread exclusion of trans people”.The letter to Kyle, signed by nearly 50 Labour backbenchers and seen by the Guardian, said businesses around the country had expressed “concern about the potential impact on service delivery and cost implications of the code of practice if it mirrors the approach set out in the EHRC’s draft code”, and that the business community did not think the EHRC had taken these worries seriously.One particular concern, the letter said, was the “legal and compliance minefield” facing businesses if the EHRC guidance were to mean it was up to them to balance the rights of transgender people and the need to ensure women-only spaces under the terms of the supreme court ruling.“Businesses have told us that while, up until now, they have been used to resolving issues quickly and quietly, in line with corporate codes of conduct about values of tolerance and respect, and with a commonsense approach, they believe that, if the draft code becomes an official code of practice, they will find disputes frequently escalating into expensive court action,” the MPs wrote.

Businesses were also concerned, the letter said, about the potential need to create new gender-neutral toilets and changing facilities, with one retailer saying doing this for its 200 stores would cost about £1.2m.It said there was also alarm about how staff would be expected to apply the new guidance, particularly the prospect of being forced to ask people to identify their gender, or say whether they were transgender, before they used single-sex facilities.“We do not believe the Equality and Human Rights Commission has provided satisfactory responses to questions around how they expect businesses to implement such stringent expectations,” the letter said.Among specific worries, it cited “the personal discomfort of staff in being willing to police gender”, the “moral, legal, and practical quagmire of identifying the gender identity of an individual based solely on their looks” and the safety considerations for staff if customers were to challenge someone’s right to use a single-sex space.

Sign up to First EditionOur morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what’s happening and why it mattersafter newsletter promotionAt the centre of the ambiguity of the way competing rights should be enforced was “the unresolved legal contradiction between the potential for being sued for challenging someone’s gender versus being sued for failing to”, the letter said.A number of businesses also predicted wider economic and reputational damage to the UK under such rules, the MPs said, saying valued trans and non-binary staff at some larger UK companies had decided to move abroad, and citing evidence that overseas firms were limiting travel to the UK for transgender employees over fears they would be unable to use facilities at airports and train stations safely.One of the MPs who signed the letter said: “The EHRC have attempted to rush this process and clearly have not listened to the concerns of businesses and employers.That is why we have written this letter, to make sure their voices are heard and so the government and the EHRC understands the potential impact of the code of practice.”A government spokesperson said the EHRC had submitted its updated code to the equalities minister, Bridget Phillipson.

“The government will consider the draft updated code and, if the minister approves it, lay it before parliament,” they said.
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Repair bills could force hundreds of UK churches to close within five years

Hundreds of Britain’s churches may be forced to close in the next five years as the cost of maintaining heritage buildings becomes unmanageable, a conference at the V&A in London has heard.Many of the UK’s 20,000-plus listed places of worship contain important heritage treasures, such as stained glass windows, and monuments of historic significance. They are also hubs for community groups and social action projects.But, according to a survey by the National Churches Trust, one in 20 churches say they will definitely or probably not be used as a place of worship by 2030. Rural churches are most at risk, with about 900 in danger of closing in the next five years

3 days ago
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London museum identifies black Waterloo veteran in rare 1821 painting

He fought in the Napoleonic wars and is one of only nine Black soldiers known to have received the Waterloo Medal, the first British medal awarded to soldiers regardless of their rank.Yet the story of Pte Thomas James has been overlooked for centuries.Now the National Army Museum in London has identified James as the likely subject of an “extraordinarily rare” painting from 1821, which it has attributed to the artist Thomas Phillips, whose more typical sitters were Georgian luminaries such as the Duke of Wellington and Lord Byron.The portrait will be unveiled to the public on Tuesday at the museum’s “Army at Home” gallery in Chelsea, where it will be placed on permanent display to highlight the service of James and other Black soldiers during the Napoleonic wars.“There’s this misconception that there weren’t any Black soldiers at Waterloo,” said the museum’s art curator, Anna Lavelle

3 days ago
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‘I was working as a cook when it went to No 1’: how Norman Greenbaum made Spirit in the Sky

‘My label said a four-minute single with lyrics about Jesus would never get played on radio. But, in 1969, the song sold two million copies. It’s now been No 1 in three different decades’Spirit in the Sky started as an old blues riff I’d been playing since my college days in Boston, but I didn’t know what to do with it. After I moved to LA, a guy I knew came up with a way of putting a fuzzbox inside my Fender Telecaster, which created the distinctive sound on Spirit in the Sky.I’d come across a greeting card with a picture of some Native Americans praying to the “spirit in the sky”

4 days ago
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I can’t stop watching videos of people discovering Beds Are Burning by Midnight Oil. Send help

Oh the pleasant pain of waiting impatiently for someone to understand the point! Oh the power of dramatic irony; the smug joy of knowing something they don’t.Oh how I wallowed in these feelings and more, when YouTube sucked me into a genre I had previously known nothing about: First Time Hearing videos, where people film themselves watching the music video of a song they’ve never heard before and grace viewers with their impromptu reactions, thoughts and facial expressions.Even before noticing the six-figures-plus viewing counts and the apparently endless number of people vying to deliver more, I instantly clocked all the trappings of the very best attention economy traps. You know: the immediate, certain knowledge that – despite your best intentions, growing hunger, thirst and backpain; despite the increasingly urgent pleas of your neglected children – you’re just going to slump there swiping your finger for hours until your higher brain finally kicks in.The first one my algorithm mugged me with was from US rapper Black Pegasus, who told us he was listening for the first time to Tim Minchin’s song Prejudice

6 days ago
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‘London could 100% compete with Cannes’: Aids charity UK gala debut honours Tracey Emin

It’s recognised for its pomp, the celebrity supporters and the fabulously glamorous locations, but for the man behind the amfAR gala, an A-list charity roadshow that rolled into London for the first time this weekend, the event is deeply personal.AmfAR – the American Foundation for Aids Research – is a nonprofit group that emerged in the 1980s to support research into HIV and Aids.“I’m an HIV-positive man. I’m lucky to be alive because of organisations like amfAR,” the foundation’s incoming CEO, Kyle Clifford, said.“I had an Aids diagnosis, and nobody in my life knew that until recently, including my family

6 days ago
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Champagne, celebs and artefacts: British Museum hosts first lavish ‘pink ball’ fundraiser

There will be champagne, of course, and dancing, fine Indian food served alongside the Parthenon marbles and cocktails mixed in front of the Renaissance treasures of the Waddesdon bequest. And everywhere – from the lights illuminating the Greek revival architecture, to the carpet on which guests arrive, to the glamorous outfits they are requested to wear – a very particular shade of pink.When the British Museum throws open its doors on Saturday evening for its first “pink ball”, it will not only be hosting an enormous and lavish party, but also inaugurating what its director, Nicholas Cullinan, has called a “flagship national event” that he hopes will become as important to his institution’s finances as it will to the London elite’s social calendar.Eight hundred invited guests have each paid £2,000 to party alongside some of the world’s most sensational artefacts and a roll call of bigwigs from the worlds of fashion, art and culture: Naomi Campbell and Alexa Chung, Miuccia Prada and Manolo Blahnik, Sir Steve McQueen and Sir Grayson Perry and Dame Kristin Scott Thomas.As well as glitz, however, there will be brass

6 days ago
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Car production slumps to a 73-year low after JLR cyber-attack

about 6 hours ago
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Battle between Netherlands and China over chipmaker could disrupt car factories, companies say

about 12 hours ago
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Trump pardons founder of Binance, world’s largest crypto exchange

about 7 hours ago
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‘Attacks will get through’: head of GCHQ urges companies to do more to fight cybercrime

about 15 hours ago
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No time for sleep or a shower: endurance runner covers 764km over five gruelling days to win Backyard Ultra world title

about 6 hours ago
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Wallabies out to banish ghosts of Eddie Jones era in Tokyo Test reunion | Angus Fontaine

about 6 hours ago