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Anti-gay hysteria greets Blair's proposal to repeal Section
28
By Steve James and Julie Hyland
27 January 2000
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The Labour government's proposal to repeal the anti-gay "Section
28" of the Local Government Act has triggered a noisy, homophobic
campaign by the Conservative Party and Christian right.
The Thatcher government introduced Section 28 in the 1980s.
It was aimed at whipping up an atmosphere of right-wing moralism,
as part of an offensive against "left-wing" local authorities
and progressive educators. Under the clause, local authorities
are forbidden to "intentionally promote homosexuality or
publish material with the intention of promoting homosexuality"
and "promote the teaching in any maintained [state] school
of the acceptability of homosexuality as a pretended family relationship."
In the intervening years, while no local authority has been
prosecuted, the clause has been used to prevent councils giving
assistance to gay and lesbian groups. In 1999, for example, Cardiff
County Council withdrew funding from a lesbian and gay Mardi Gras
on the grounds of Section 28. Schools are also not meant to discuss
homosexuality as anything other than a deviation from the norm.
Teachers and gay groups say that this has prevented some adolescents
getting the support they need and has contributed to an increase
in homophobic bullying in schools.
Gay and civil rights groups have vigorously opposed Section
28. Opinion polls show a significant liberalising in general attitudes
towards homosexuality and other sexual matters over the last period.
The clause was so broadly seen as undemocratic that Labour believed
its repeal would not arouse substantial opposition. Instead, with
votes on the issue looming in Westminster, the Scottish parliament
and the House of Lords, the "Keep the Clause" campaign
has become ever more strident and vicious.
The pro-Section 28 campaign has been most vigorous in Scotland,
where it is led by a coalition comprising Brian Souter, one of
Scotland's richest men; Cardinal Thomas Winning, the archbishop
of Glasgow; and Martin Clarke, editor of Scotland's biggest selling
tabloid, the Daily Record.
Following Labour's announcement last October that they were
to proceed with the repeal, the Record ran a headline thundering
that it would lead to "Gay Sex Lessons in School". Cardinal
Winning, who had earlier stated that homosexuals were unsuited
for certain jobs, also made a speech in which he denounced homosexuality
as a "perversion".
The entry of transport billionaire Souter into the campaign
has encouraged the Christian right and tabloid press to up the
stakes dramatically. Souter is the chief executive of Stagecoach,
the Scottish-based bus, rail and air company. He amassed his empire,
and a sizeable personal fortune, through the Tory government's
privatisation of public transport and attacks on working conditions.
One of the main financial backers for the Scottish National Party
(SNP), he is a member of the evangelist Church of the Nazarene,
one of a network of right-wing Christian groups organising opposition
to the repeal.
Through his charity, the Souter Foundation, the multimillionaire
offered £500,000 to the Scottish School Boards Association
(SSBA) and the "Keep the Clause" campaign, both of which
oppose repeal. Members of the SSBA are said to be furious that
the organisation has been allied to a campaign many do not support.
Souter also recruited the aid of ex-tabloid editor Jack Irvine,
head of the public relations company Media House, for the campaign.
Irvine, a notorious homophobe, also writes a column for the Sunday
Mirror. Media House has said they will take out radio, TV
and billboard adverts, targeting gay advice groups that receive
public funding.
The tabloid press began a campaign of phone- and write-ins
directed against Members of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) supporting
repeal, designed to show mass support for "Keep the Clause".
They were joined by the Scotsman newspaper, which in an
editorial entitled "Souter's concerns need to be heard"
praised his "enlightened stewardship of Stagecoach"
and warned of "a tide of explicit material washing over our
schools".
The Church has circulated a document to be issued in all Catholic
schools in Scotland stating that "Homosexual acts are contrary
to the natural law". One-third of Scottish school children
attend Catholic schools. During a speech to a Catholic family
association in Malta at the weekend, Cardinal Winning equated
the threat to "Christian traditions" posed by an "active
and militant homosexual lobby", with that faced by the island
from the Nazis in World War Two.
The Scottish campaign has attracted support from sections of
the political and religious establishment across Britain. The
Conservative Party under William Hague said his party was opposed
to repeal, as it would mean, "using taxpayers money to promote
homosexuality in our schools". In England, the Anglican Bishop
of Liverpool and the Archbishop of Canterbury, George Carey, have
also spoken in favour of Section 28's retention. Conservative
peer Baroness Young warned that the party will attempt to force
a vote against Section 28's repeal in the House of Lords within
the next two weeks.
Most significant, however, has been Labour and the SNP's reaction
to this right-wing backlash. It underscores how all the major
parties in Britain compete for political and financial backing
from amongst the same narrow elite, and the serious implications
this has for democratic rights.
Financially beholden to Souter, the SNP has also sought to
curry favour with the Catholic Church in Scotland as a means of
raising its political profile. Cardinal Winning is rumoured to
have threatened to break the Church's relationship with the Labour
Party over the latter's stance on abortion and homosexuality,
in favour of the SNP.
The SNP has sought to portray the issue as a storm in a teacup.
Scottish National Party MSP Michael Matheson said that "both
sides in this debate are closer together than might be thought".
He insisted that new guidelines on what could be taught in schools
should be issued, prior to Section 28's repeal. SNP leader Alex
Salmond reiterated this, stating that "parents' concerns"
should be addressed prior to any changes.
The Labour Party, which has also been courting Souter and recently
invited him to join a committee overseeing government policy,
is similarly kow-towing to the right. Labour's First Minister
in Scotland, Donald Dewar, has also announced that the vote in
the Scottish Parliament would be "conscience" vote,
with no party whip imposed. Dewar, who has refused a challenge
from Souter to debate the issue on TV, has forbidden Labour MSPs
from commenting to the press on the issue. Labour's Scottish Executive
has also suggested implementing disciplinary measures against
teachers that "promote" homosexuality.
It is not the first time that Labour has backtracked on its
commitment to sexual equality. Last year the government inserted
a clause aimed at equalising the age of consent for gay sex with
that of heterosexuals into its draconian Crime and Disorder Bill.
They had hoped an alliance between the Church and Conservative
Party would drop its opposition to the amendment in the interests
of "law and order". Instead, the right threatened to
derail the entire bill unless the offending amendment was removed.
Labour duly obliged.
Similarly, when the European Court of Human Rights ruled in
September last year that Britain's ban on homosexuals serving
in the armed forces was unlawful, Labour would only say that it
was studying the recommendations.
Blair has notably refused to condemn the anti-gay hysteria.
In a statement earlier this week he appealed for "people
to be calm and conduct this debate in a calm and rational manner",
and announced that the upcoming parliamentary vote would be made
a matter of "conscience", i.e., Labour would not enforce
a party whip.
His decision followed a statement by Labour MP and church estates
commissioner Stuart Bell that he and other Labour MP's would vote
against repeal. In the tabloid Sun newspaper on Wednesday,
Bell said, "A flood of material has been prepared to inundate
our schools and influence children as young as five". Threatening
a rebellion by backbench Labour MP's, Bell continued that repeal
was "just the start of a gay revolution".
See Also:
European court rules
against ban on homosexuals in British armed forces
[29 September 1999]
The British
House of Lords, gay consent and democratic rights
[5 August 1998]
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