Stop pathetic excuses on transgender conversion therapy ban, LGBT adviser urges UK government
 A former LGBT Government adviser has urged leaders to stop making âpathetic excusesâ after the British prime minister said there are âcomplexities and sensitivitiesâ around banning conversion therapy for transgender people.
Jayne Ozanne said the LGBT+ communityâs trust in the Government is âcompletely and utterly brokenâ by a series of U-turns last week and its backtracking on commitments to include transgender people in upcoming legislation to ban the practice.
It comes as Boris Johnson defended the decision not to include trans people in the Governmentâs proposed ban, saying there are âcomplexities and sensitivitiesâ which need to be worked through.
Speaking during a visit to a hospital in Welwyn Garden City, Mr Johnson said there are still things to be worked out, and that he was âsadâ at the reaction of groups which pulled out of a UK-hosted global conference in protest, which has since been cancelled.
He said: âIâm sorry we havenât been able to reach agreement with the organisations concerned but that will in no way diminish our determination to tackle prejudice wherever we can.â
Ms Ozanne told the PA news agency: âThe Government must stop these pathetic excuses, listen to the experts and get on with putting in place the urgent protections we need.â
Earlier on Wednesday, British health secretary Sajid Javid was asked by Sky News why banning conversion therapy for transgender people has been removed from the Bill for the Queenâs Speech.
He told the broadcaster: âWhen it comes to conversion therapy, it is absolutely right, as the Government has said, that we ban the so-called conversion therapy for LGB people.
âWhen it comes to trans, I do think that we need to be more careful.â
Mr Javid then referred to an interim review by Dr Hilary Cass which found some health staff feel under pressure to adopt an âunquestioning affirmative approachâ, and recommended they remain open and explore the patientâs experience and options.
Ms Ozanne said conversion therapy and good medical practice, where people have a safe space to explore who they are without judgment, are two very different things.
She continued: âI think he is conflating two very different things.
âConversion therapy is about being told that you can never be trans, that there is an ideology at heart which stops someone being who they are.
âIt is not any different to the LGB situation.
âOf course these issues are complex, but that is why other international countries have found a way through.
âWeâve been working on this for four years. And itâs time that we stopped making excuses and got on with what our legal experts have told us is something relatively simple to do.â
Ms Ozanne quit her role as a Government LGBT adviser in March 2021, accusing ministers of creating a âhostile environmentâ for LGBT people.
She said she âabsolutelyâ would have resigned immediately if she had still been in post last week when news of the conversion therapy U-turn first broke.
On Tuesday, the Governmentâs LGBT+ business champion Iain Anderson quit his post with a âheavy heartâ, citing the Governmentâs âprofoundly shockingâ position on banning conversion therapy for transgender people.
We have been dismayed by the government's apparent change of direction on the conversion therapy ban, and the justifications being used.
— British Psychoanalytic Council (@BritPsyCouncil) April 6, 2022
See our full statement here: https://t.co/2FHVlMOKno
At least 100 LGBT+ and HIV organisations pulled out of its forthcoming landmark LGBT conference, Safe To Be Me, which has since been cancelled.
Last week, it was initially announced that ministers were scrapping plans to ban the practice, sparking a furious backlash.
A Government spokesman confirmed it was looking instead at ways of preventing it through existing law and âother non-legislative measuresâ.
However, within hours Mr Johnson was said to have âchanged his mindâ and a senior Government source was quoted as saying legislation would be introduced.
The Government then said it is committed to a legislative ban but separate work is required to âconsider the issue of transgender conversion therapy furtherâ.
The British Psycholanalytic Council said it was âdismayedâ that part of the justification for the change in direction is that exploratory therapies may be at risk of being impacted negatively by a ban.
The body said: âThe process of safe exploration of gender and sexual identity in talking therapy, and support for each individualâs right to expression of their unique self, should continue to be a mainstay of mental health services that promote our public wellbeing.
âWe have called on Government for publicly funded talking therapies to be better resourced to accompany implementation of a ban.
âWhilst we note the recent clarification that further work will be undertaken, we believe that including gender alongside sexuality in a ban will carry no real risk of ethical exploratory therapy being misconstrued as an alleged form of âconversion therapyâ.â
Conservative MP William Wragg called for the Government to âhave some empathyâ.
He tweeted: âIf banning conversion therapy will stop the likes of me being subjected to mental cruelty in repressing my true self, why not so for someone who is trans?
âI can see no logic in excluding trans people from legislation banning conversion therapy. Letâs have some empathy.â
                    
                    
                    
 
 
 



