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Launching a museum is an ambitious endeavour, and Queer Britain has come together with impressive speed. Its opening is an important milestone for a minority that has only enjoyed widespread public acceptance and significant legal protections for the briefest of periods, and is, in a sense, still blinking, slightly dazed, in the light. Opening its doors to the public on 5 May, the space is ideally situated in King’s Cross, both for Londoners and for those visiting the capital by rail. So this really is an opportune moment to launch what is, astonishingly, Britain’s first ever national LGBTQ+ museum, established by the charity Queer Britain. Trailblazing Labour MP Maureen Colquhoun with the Gay Defence Committee in 1977. Nevertheless, in this period LGBTQ+ people flourished culturally and artistically, while from the 90s onwards, hostile public attitudes crumbled precipitously as anti-gay laws were struck from statute books. The 1980s HIV/Aids pandemic, ravaged a generation of gay and bisexual men, attitudes towards gay people hardened and a moral panic culminated in the passing of section 28, banning the “promotion” of homosexuality in schools: the first anti-gay legislation passed since 1885. “Let me remind them that no amount of legislation will prevent homosexuals from being the subject of dislike and derision, or at best of pity,”Īfter the Sexual Offences Act was passed in 1967, convictions of gay men for gross indecency actually increased, and gay people were still characterised as would-be sexual predators and threats to children.
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“Lest the opponents of the new bill think that a new freedom, a new privileged class has been created,” he declared. When Lord Arran co-sponsored the bill that ended the total criminalisation of same-sex relations between men – after his gay brother had killed himself – his preamble was bleak. The farmer by trade, who chairs the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee, said he first accidentally viewed porn in the Commons chamber after looking at tractors online, before later doing so deliberately.I t is little over half a century since homosexuality was partially decriminalised in England and Wales, and it’s a period defined by both progress and trauma. On Saturday, Neil Parish announced his resignation as MP for Tiverton and Honiton after two colleagues reported having seen him watching porn.
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| /QtIss4IGalĮarlier on Sunday, Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle called for “radical” reform to working practices in parliament following a series of bullying and sexual misconduct offences involving MPs. Labour MP Chris Bryant shares how he was 'touched up' by four male MPs when he joined Parliament. “I would a call the person out immediately and I would make a complaint.” I think that now if anybody would do that I would be absolutely robust. “And I think a lot of women have been through that.”īryant said he could think of four MPs but he did not name them, adding: “I was shocked at the time…none of them are out of course.
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“I never felt I was able to report it because you end up being part of the story, and that’s the last thing you want. Mr Bryant told LBC Radio that after his election he was targeted by “older, senior” men but felt he could not report it because he did not want to “end up being part of the story”.īryant, The Commons Standards Committee chair, told LBC Radio: “I remember when I came in, in 2001, I was regularly touched up by older, senior gay – well, they weren’t out but – MPs. Rhondda MP Chris Bryant says he was “regularly touched up” by older colleagues in parliament when he was first elected.īryant was selected as the candidate for the safe Labour in 2000 and took his place in the House of Commons the following year.