Surrey Police and Crime Commissioner reprimanded over tweet
Surrey’s Police and Crime Commissioner breached code of conduct for sharing a tweet by J.K. Rowling about “men who keep telling us they are women” and has been reprimanded.
Lisa Townsend retweeted the Harry Potter author’s tweet that implied biologically male rapists are not female, and and tweeted the hashtag #IStandWithJKRowling.
Reigate MP Crispin Blunt and two others reported her to Surrey County Council’s police and crime panel, which holds the police and crime commissioner (PCC) to account.
Their complaints sub-committee last week found the language she used breached her office’s code of conduct.
Ms Townsend, who noted she received their decision on International Women’s Day, said it was “quite sinister” that the three men who reported her had tried to shut down the debate.
It is the not the first time her comments about transgender issues have sparked complaints, but in November she was cleared of any breach.
This time the complaints stemmed from a tweet from the Harry Potter author in December that shared a Sunday Times article reporting Police Scotland will log rapes committed by offenders with male genitalia as being perpetrated by a woman, if the attacker ‘insists’ on identifying as female.
J.K. Rowling suggested she thought this was absurd, borrowing from George Orwell’s 1984 in her tweet: “War is Peace. Freedom is Slavery. Ignorance is Strength. The Penised Individual Who Raped You Is a Woman.”
This was retweeted and supported by Ms Townsend with the comment: “It’s not a ‘niche’ issue, it’s not ‘hysterical’ of women to be taking to the streets about it. We will not accept this gaslighting from men who keep telling us they are women, or from those who enable them. #IStandWithJKRowling”.
Her tweet was liked nearly 2,000 times and attracted more than 80 comments, a mix of both thankful and critical.
The PCC’s code of conduct obliges her to use language that treats others with dignity and respect, and the sub-committee was split over whether they thought her tweet had done this.
A majority found that the words “gaslighting from men who keep telling us they are women” were not dignified or respectful.
Some members, however, considered it was not disrespectful when read in the context of the article.
The code of conduct does not apply when the PCC is acting in a purely private capacity.
But the sub-committee found this had not been the case since she had tweeted from an account that clearly identifies her as Surrey Police and Crime Commissioner.
The mostly male sub-committee has asked the Tory PCC to write an ‘explanatory letter’ to the three men who complained about her.
Conservative MP Mr Blunt, who is chairman of the all-party parliamentary group on global LGBT+ rights, tweeted: “I am glad the panel agree with me about the need to take the heat out of this fraught debate.
“I am happy to have frank conversations with colleagues from both sides but it is important that any debate is led by the evidence not myths and fear.
“The panel’s recommendations are clear: PCCs have every right to express their views, however, as an elected official they have a legal duty to engage in a manner that is respectful and upholds the dignity of all their electors.”
Councillor David Lewis (Con, Cobham) responded: “Your actions against Lisa Townsend are a disgrace. Lisa has the confidence of Conservatives in Surrey. She was supporting a view which is held by a vast number people and you should take the heat out of the debate by withdrawing your complaint.”
Appearing on GB News on Sunday, Ms Townsend said: “We’ve found ourselves in this slightly odd space where speaking truth is seen as controversial and those of us who do get called bigots and suffer all of the bile that goes with that.”
Having different views on the subject was healthy, she said, adding: “What’s not healthy and what’s actually quite sinister is when people try to shut down the debate and that’s exactly what these men were trying to do.”