June was Pride month, and 4 July – today – is general election day. So, less than 24 hours before voters could hit the polls, an LGBTQ+ magazine has well and truly pulled the mask off the likely next prime minister. Because, once again, flip-flop robocop Starmer has shown he and the Labour Party readily throw trans people under the bus.
LGBTQ+ mag throws shade on Starmer
Keir Starmer has penned an op-ed for LGBTQ+ magazine Attitude.
However, in the time since it received his copy on 23 June, and publication, Starmer has:
- Said he’d be willing to talk to serial transphobic bigot and billionaire JK Rowling over her views on trans rights.
- Called discussing gender identity in schools an “ideology”
- Told the Times that trans women don’t have the right to access women-only-spaces, like bathrooms.
- Criticised David Tennant for calling out the former Tories’ equality minister Kemi Badenoch over her transphobia.
Given all this, Attitude was loathe to publish his puff piece laying out Labour’s purported LGBTQ+ credentials and pledges. Styles wrote how the publication considered “spiking” the op-ed entirely. Instead though, they did something better.
On 3 July, it posted his soapbox online. However, the publication didn’t post it in isolation. Preluding the Labour leader’s spiel, Attitude’s publisher Darren Styles wrote what was ostensibly a 900+ word take-down.
Specifically, the “context and correction” article delved into Starmer and his party’s swathe of attacks on trans people. And all of it, the Labour leader had carried out in just over a week since Starmer sent his piece to Attitude.
Billionaires before communities
In a show of good faith, the publication reached out to Labour HQ over all this. Styles said that:
Last Friday (28th June), Attitude went back to Labour HQ. We asked that, before we published his open letter, Sir Keir agreed – in due course – to meet with us and Caroline Litman, the mother of Alice Litman, a trans woman who took her own life in 2022 after waiting 1,023 days for her first appointment with the GIC at Charing Cross. An appointment for which, were she alive today, she’d still be waiting.
Seemingly, between offering Labour’s latest billionaire flame a confab, and tearing into trans people in interviews with rightwing rags, Starmer was a bit too busy to get back to them.
So, Attitude rightly tore the Labour leader to shreds over it. In the literary equivalent of empty-chairing the shameless no-show, it dropped the story the day before the election. Styles wrote that:
in our opinion and in light of events, it is equivocal in parts in that it makes no mention of the trans issues that have subsequently come to light.
And Attitude is clear: LGBTQ+ rights include trans rights, trans rights are human rights and human rights are not political. Or at least shouldn’t be. It’s politicians that make human rights political, and when they do so in search of popularity, support and/or power you have but one chance to hold them to account.
In other words, Attitude rinsed Starmer’s slippery sales pitch to the queer community:
Absolutely scathing – Keir Starmer sent an open letter full of empty noise to one of the UK’s largest LGBT+ publications, and they published it but only after tearing into all his dogwhistling and pandering to transphobes.
Starmer’s Labour is not for LGBT+ people. https://t.co/qlfbAontkm
— William G. Saraband 🏴🇵🇹🏳️🌈 (@wgsaraband) July 3, 2024
Slippery Starmer LGBTQ+ Section 28 hypocrisy
People on X were forthright in spelling out the blatant grifting in action:
This is Keir Starmer in a nutshell. He will bend and flip flop in whatever way he needs to as long as it helps him gain power. I’m only scared now what a man who celebrates being backed my Rupert Murdoch will do once he’s achieved his goal.
— Pingu7 (@paulpingu) July 4, 2024
The context is so key in this because this man has been known to pander to everyone.
He has no solid views of his own, that should give everyone pause about supporting him. https://t.co/M3Xdc2FAYr— F.K.A Biriyani (@fkabiriyani) July 4, 2024
One person pointed out the irony of Starmer boasting on Labour’s history of supporting LGBTQ+ folks:
A great article holding Labour to account.
Keir Starmer writing this open letter celebrating Labour’s history on LGBT+ rights including repealing Section 28, the Gender Recognition Act, and the Equality Act is unbelievable given the position he has taken over the last few weeks. https://t.co/9kzibf1ezt
— Jo Brassington (@jobrassington) July 3, 2024
Of course, his reference to repealing Section 28 fell particularly flat, given he essentially proposed to impose the equivalent for transgender identities. In fact, without irony, he literally blurted out this de facto ban the very day after sending Attitude his pomp. Go figure.
Another person on X was appalled at the Labour leader’s transparent, blatant hypocrisy:
A great article holding Labour to account.
Keir Starmer writing this open letter celebrating Labour’s history on LGBT+ rights including repealing Section 28, the Gender Recognition Act, and the Equality Act is unbelievable given the position he has taken over the last few weeks. https://t.co/9kzibf1ezt
— Jo Brassington (@jobrassington) July 3, 2024
Political pandering has consequences
Attitude’s article laid bare Starmer’s rank egotism, but more importantly, how he’s content to use marginalised communities as a political football when it suits. For the people at the sharp end of the Starmer show – like the trans community – it’s increasingly dangerous. People on X pointed out how his political pander has consequences:
a great article. Journalists holding Starmer to account for his actions, and not just accepting his warm words. At every turn he has stood with high profile transphobes and it has real world effects at a very dark time for trans and queer people. Don’t vote Labour. https://t.co/qlREq6zZaa
— matthewwhitfield.bsky.social (@mwhitfield80) July 3, 2024
Yesterday he was in the news for saying trans women should be banned from toilets and hospitals – EVEN if they hold a GRC.
Hours later this happened! (Because politicians influence and if they imply trans women are worthless, then people act like we are!)https://t.co/WvPqXHBdkT
— UnicornsRock 🏳️🌈🏳️⚧️ @unicornsrockuk.bsky. (@UnicornsRockUK) July 3, 2024
At the end of the day, a party – and prime minister – who will meet with a billionaire bigot, but not the parent of a trans woman who took her own life, is not the party for the LGBTQ+ community:
This is a fiery and perfect context to whatever Starmer could say. The fact he and @UKLabour would fall over themselves to offer to meet a billionaire and refuse to even acknowledge an invitation to meet with the mum of a trans person, say all you need about their LGBTQ betrayal https://t.co/g1jZty6D7P
— Tristan Stewart-Robertson (@SRTristan) July 3, 2024
This election day, vote for people who unequivocally support trans and queer folks. Labour, led by Starmer, clearly doesn’t. And when you come for one community in the LGBTQ+ family, you face all of us – make sure to tell him that at the ballot box.
Feature image via the Canary