Sajid Javid says sport should be 'about sex rather than gender'

Health Secretary Sajid Javid says sport should be ‘about sex rather than gender’ as trans cyclist Emily Bridges is BANNED from women’s competitions to avoid boycott by furious competitors

  • Health Secretary said competitions should be ‘about sex rather than gender’ 
  • Emily Bridges blocked from female event because she used to compete as a man
  • Other female riders threatened to pull out of National Omnium Championships

Senior minister Sajid Javid jumped two-footed into the gender and sport debate today amid a furious row over whether a trans cyclist should be allowed to take part in women’s competitions. 

The Health Secretary said that competitions should be ‘about sex rather than gender’ as Emily Bridges was blocked from a female-only competition because she had competed as a man until a few weeks ago.

Other female riders had threatened to pull out of the National Omnium Championships in Derby on Saturday before Miss Bridges, 21, was forced to pull out.

Asked about the row on the UnherdTV podcast, Mr Javid said: ‘My own view is that when it comes to sport, it should be about sex rather than gender and sex should be based on your biological sex.’

On a visit to a hospital today he also criticised a Liverpool healthcare trust that has changed its rules to ask male as well as female patients if they are pregnant before undergoing scans.  

Asked about the Emily Bridges row on the UnherdTV podcast, Mr Javid said: ‘My own view is that when it comes to sport, it should be about sex rather than gender and sex should be based on your biological sex.’

On a visit to a hospital today he also criticsed a Liverpool healthcare trust that has changed its rules to ask male as well as female patients if they are pregnant before undergoing scans.


Trans cyclist Emily Bridges (left) has been barred from competing in a women’s omnium race against Dame Laura Kenny this weekend. Her aunt Helen Bridges, 64, (right) claimed her niece had come under immense pressure over the race and is right to be upset.

Emily Bridges, seen here riding in the male Tour de Gwent in April 2018, before she began her transition. Her inclusion in women’s events has left some female cyclists ‘distressed’

The Walton Centre NHS Foundation Trust in Liverpool currently asks all patients under the age of 60 whether they could be expecting a baby, regardless of their gender, if they are having X-Rays or MRIs.

This is to ensure it is safe to proceed, given the harm radiation can pose to unborn children.

But when asked on Thursday if it was right for NHS staff to direct the question to male patients, Mr Javid told reporters: ‘That doesn’t make any sense to me.’

Speaking during a visit to Barking Community Hospital in Essex, he said: ‘On a personal level I can’t think of why you would ask anyone that’s a biological male if they are pregnant or have been pregnant.’

He added: ‘If there is some kind of (a) clinical reason for an NHS hospital to do that then that’s a decision for them.’

It reportedly follows an update to regulations by the Department of Health in 2017, changing the definition of those who should be questioned on the matter from ‘females of childbearing age’ to ‘individuals of childbearing potential’.

Meanwhile, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer faced four questions from broadcasters about his party’s views on gender, including on whether a woman can have a penis.

He said ‘biology matters’ but there are ‘a small number of people who are born into a gender which they don’t identify with’, pointing to the case of Tory MP Jamie Wallis, who came out as trans on Wednesday.

Speaking in Bury following Labour’s local election campaign launch, Sir Keir said: ‘Biology matters and, for the vast majority of women, what matters is biology, we all understand that, we get that, that’s common sense.

‘But there are a small number of people who are born into a gender which they don’t identify with, and strongly identify with another gender, and they often struggle, Jamie Wallis is a Conservative MP who bravely spoke out yesterday and demonstrated that struggle.

‘I don’t want to stand in the way of supporting and respecting those who find themselves in that position.

‘So, biology matters – (for) the vast majority of women that’s very, very straightforward.

‘But there are a small number who struggle with their gender identity, and I want to respect and support them.’

The Opposition leader said he recognised that transgender people ‘often go through (a) very difficult time’, while at the same time stating that ‘nobody is quarrelling’ with the ‘vast majority’ view that ‘biology is what matters’.

Labour has found itself in difficulty over trans issues, with Harry Potter author JK Rowling, who has been vocal on her views on transgender issues and biology, saying earlier this month that the party could ‘no longer be counted on to defend women’s rights’.

A spokesperson from the Walton Centre said: ‘Our policy relating to asking patients if they are pregnant before undergoing procedures involving ionising radiation and MRI adheres to national legislation, as certain amounts of radiation can be harmful to foetuses in utero.

‘We believe asking all people who are having their abdomen imaged/scanned in this way, regardless of gender, is the least intrusive way of ensuring it is safe to proceed.’

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