There have been two huge victories for workers’ rights over the past week. And yet the left is schtum. No champagne corks are popping. No raised fist emojis have appeared on lefty social media. I bet no Labour-backing luvvie has plans to make a tear-jerking movie about this stirring triumph for working people.
No Labour-backing luvvie plans to make a tear-jerking movie about this stirring triumph for working people
We all know why. It’s because the victors are women, and more importantly they’re women who demanded that most scandalous right – the right to their own spaces, the right to undress away from men. The left is saying nowt – and in fact is probably seething – because it hates nothing more than an uppity broad who says sex is real and women matter.
The first big win was for the Darlington nurses. These are the eight nurses who bravely challenged the County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust for making them share a changing area with a male who identifies as a woman. It is an appalling assault on our privacy and dignity to make us share an intimate space with a man, the nurses argued. And they won.
A tribunal ruled that the NHS Trust had ‘unlawfully harassed’ the nurses by making them share a changing room with a ‘biological male trans woman’. It also found that the nurses’ complaints were not taken seriously. It’s the 21st century and women are being haughtily dismissed by the boss class, just for wanting that most basic right to change into their work clothes in a fella-free zone.
It gets worse: not only is much of the left cravenly quiet about the nurses’ valiant strike for reason and freedom in the workplace – some openly opposed the nurses. Alarmingly, Unison, the public-sector union, sided with the biological male over the dignity-seeking nurses. One Unison bigwig dismissed the nurses’ concerns as ‘anti-trans bigotry’.
Imagine going back to the 1980s, or even the 2000s, and telling people that in the future a trade union would actively seek to undermine the workplace rights of women. That it would slam nurses – nurses! – as ‘bigots’ because they would rather not undress in the presence of men. People would have called you a loon. Yet here we are.
Unison’s breezy dismissal of the nurses’ plea for fairness was an outrage. It was an act of treason against the working class. Unions were founded to expand the dignity of working people, not sacrifice it at the altar of ideology. After the tribunal’s ruling, Unison said it stands by its ‘trans, non-binary and gender diverse members’. Strip away all the PC gobbledygook and what Unison is really saying is that the right of men to waltz into women’s changing areas matters more than the right of women to enjoy privacy in the workplace.
Unison’s flagrant betrayal of eight hard-working women speaks to the corrupting influence of identity politics. The bourgeois mania of genderfluidity and other post-truth doctrines have driven our institutions mad. Consider the other recent victory – that of Jennifer Melle, a nurse from Croydon.
Even the most stinging satirist of the follies of our time could not have invented a story like Ms Melle’s. She was caring for a high-security prisoner, a convicted paedophile, who identifies as a woman. And she referred to him as ‘Mr’. Sounds polite to me, but to NHS management it was an intolerable act of ‘misgendering’. Melle was given a written warning.
She referred to him as ‘Mr’. Sounds polite to me, but to NHS management it was an intolerable act of ‘misgendering’
So this is where we are: the feelings of a paedo matter more than the rights of a nurse. His desire to be referred to as ‘she’ outweighs Ms Melle’s right to act according to her conscience (and reality). The truth is Ms Melle was the victim here – the patient is said to have responded to her ‘misgendering’ with racist abuse (Melle is black). And yet, in a searing testament to the Kafkaesque lunacy of our times, it’s Melle who was punished.
This week, the disciplinary action against her was dropped. A black nurse who had an unblemished record during her 12 years of hard graft at the Epsom and St Helier NHS Trust is vindicated following a mad battle with her bosses over the hurt feelings of a male convict, and yet still the left refuses to crack a smile. According to the warped logic of their beloved gender ideology, the bad guy is the nurse who spoke the truth.
We don’t talk enough about the classism that fuels trans and other faddish beliefs. Plummy students and the managerial elites might accrue ever-more virtue points through embracing the gender ideology. But for working-class women, that ideology has been a disaster. It has unravelled rights they fought hard for, prime among them the right of women at work to have a private space where they might dress, wash and attend to their needs away from men.
We had Made in Dagenham, the hit film about female machinists’ fight for equal pay. How about Made in Darlington next – a film about eight nurses who struck a brilliant blow for biological reality, common sense, women’s rights and workers’ dignity? I’d watch it.
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