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Kemi Badenoch Announces Plan to Scrap Public Sector Equality Duty

Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch will call for scrapping the duty that requires public bodies to promote equality in decisions. The announcement comes as Labour prepares its own equality strategy focused on class background.

The Bbc
1 source·Jun 8, 5:02 PM·2m read
Kemi Badenoch Announces Plan to Scrap Public Sector Equality Dutybbc.co.uk
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Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch will say in a speech on Tuesday that rules requiring public bodies such as schools and hospitals to promote equality when making decisions should be scrapped. The party described the move as the first step in a wider programme to restore common sense. Badenoch will argue that the Public Sector Equality Duty has been used to promote dangerous and divisive agendas.

She will say the duty has become a minefield that exposes almost every significant public decision to legal challenge. The duty was introduced in 2010 as part of the Equality Act, which merged previous anti-discrimination laws such as the Equal Pay Act and the Disability Discrimination Act.

It states that public authorities should advance equality of opportunity between people who share and people who do not share a relevant protected characteristic.

Protected characteristics include age, disability, race, pregnancy, sex and sexual orientation. Government guidance says the duty should always be applied in a proportionate way depending on the circumstances of the case and that organisations should avoid an overly bureaucratic and burdensome approach.

Since its introduction, organisations and individuals have been able to take public bodies to court for failing to abide by the duty.

A group of around 100 care home owners argued that the fees did not cover their costs and took legal action against a council on the grounds that the council had not fully considered the impact on vulnerable residents. In 2020, the Equalities and Human Rights Commission concluded that the Home Office had not complied with the duty in relation to how its hostile environment policies would impact members of the Windrush generation.

Ahead of the speech, the Conservatives argued that the duty was the legal foundation that has allowed identity politics, DEI bureaucracy and ideological box-ticking to spread across public services.

Badenoch is expected to say: "We are going to scrap this duty altogether. We do not need to replace it. " The Labour government is promising a new equality and diversity strategy with a primary focus on getting working class people joining and progressing in the civil service.

Details of the strategy are expected to be published shortly. The government said it would place a major, explicit emphasis on socio-economic background as a primary driver of unequal opportunity. A government press release said the strategy would aim to address an over-representation of people from more well-off backgrounds in the civil service.

It also said it would try to ensure that people from working class and regional backgrounds do not feel they need to alter their behaviour, accents or language to fit in with the civil service. The Conservatives are trying to forge a distinct response from both Labour, who have strengthened equality protections, and Reform UK, who want to scrap the Equality Act altogether.

Reform UK said Badenoch's suggestion was classic Conservative politics: too little, too late, and nowhere near enough.

Liberal Democrat Women and Equalities Spokesperson Marie Goldman MP said the speech was a desperate attempt to fan the flames of culture war politics from a Conservative party completely out of ideas. She said instead of exploiting division, the Conservatives should focus on coming up with ideas to fix an NHS and economy that they left in tatters.

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