Green party trying to purge gender-critical voices, claims expelled former spokesperson

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"Former Green Party Spokesperson Claims Expulsion Reflects Authoritarian Shift on Gender Issues"

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Dr. Pallavi Devulapalli, a former health spokesperson for the Green Party, has publicly claimed that the party is moving away from its foundational principles towards a more authoritarian left-wing stance. After being expelled from the party, Devulapalli stated that her dismissal was largely due to her gender-critical views, particularly regarding trans rights, which she argues have become a divisive issue within the party. She expressed concern that the leadership's stance on transgender issues is creating an environment that punishes dissenting opinions, suggesting that her expulsion was a pretext to remove her for her beliefs rather than a legitimate disciplinary action. This situation has highlighted a growing rift among party members, particularly as the party heads into a leadership election where differing views on gender identity are likely to be a significant point of contention.

Devulapalli's expulsion is part of a broader trend within the Green Party, where she claims there is a systematic effort to silence gender-critical voices. She is now among a group of former members who have faced similar treatment, which she refers to as a 'purge.' The party’s current co-leader, Adrian Ramsay, has indicated that he believes members should not be expelled for expressing gender-critical views, suggesting internal divisions on this issue. As the party navigates its identity and policies in light of recent developments, including a Supreme Court ruling on the definition of 'woman' in the Equality Act, there are fears that the party may become increasingly intolerant of diverse opinions. Devulapalli has received support from various individuals within and outside the party who advocate for open debate rather than expulsion, emphasizing the need for a return to democratic values and scientific discourse within the Green Party.

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TheGreen partyis veering away from its founding culture towards a more leftwing authoritarianism, its former health spokesperson has claimed.

Dr Pallavi Devulapalli said trans rights had become an obvious totem in the new climate, and accused the party of trying to purge anyone with gender-critical views.

Devulapalli, a GP and member of King’s Lynn and West Norfolk council, was expelled from the party for a rules breach that she has said was due to her beliefs on gender. Her expulsion this month, she said, has exposed a rift in the party’s leadership on transgender issues that threatens to widen during this summer’s leadership election.

The party’s current co-leader Adrian Ramsay, who has argued that members should not be thrown out for saying trans women are not women, is pressing internally for Devulapalli’s expulsion to be reviewed.

A Green party spokesperson said: “We don’t comment on individual cases.”

Devulapalli was suspended last September, three months after she failed to back the party’s manifesto policy on theright of self-identification for trans peopleduring a hustings event. Last week she was informed she had been expelled from the party after attending what Devulapalli said she thought was a social gathering, but which a disciplinary panel deemed was an official party event from which she was banned because of her suspension.

Devulapalli said the move was a “pretext” to get rid of her. She said: “They don’t like my stance on trans self ID and the trans women policy. They didn’t come out and say that so they expelled me on a technicality.”

She added: “It feels like a purge. We’ve seen the Greens veer away from its original founding culture towards a much more leftwing authoritarian culture. If you say or think the wrong thing then you’re out – that’s really worrying.”

Devulapalli is now one of 25 “Greens in Exile” – former party members who have been suspended or expelled largely for their gender critical views. Last year a court found the party had removed Dr Shahrar Ali as a party spokesperson in aprocedurally unfair waythat discriminated against him because of his gender critical belief. In 2021, Ali’s position as spokesperson is understood to have prompted Sîan Berry, now an MP, to quit as co-leader.

Devulapalli said the party’s belief that trans women are women was “peddling a falsehood”, adding: “It denies science and denies reality and alienates the Greens from the vast majority of voters who know the truth when they see it.”

Following April’s supreme court ruling that a “woman” in the Equality Act refers only to a biological woman, the Greens’ policy has come under strain. In interviews since, Ramsay, who is standing again as co-leader with fellow MP Ellie Chowns, has refused to commit to an answer, but Carla Denyer, who is standing down as co-leader, has said that“trans women are women [and] trans men are men”. Zack Polanski, a leadership challenger, is campaigning on the slogan “trans rights are human rights”.

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Devulapalli fears that if Polanski wins, the party will become more “authoritarian” and less tolerant of gender critical views as it tries to appeal to disillusioned Labour supporters. She said: “A lot of members have said they will leave the party if he’s elected. People are trying to reclaim the Greens back to being a party of democratic values and science.”

Since her expulsion Devulapalli says she has had dozens of messages of support, including from fellow GPs and prominent Greens such as the party’s former candidate for London mayorJenny Jonesand another former Green partyhealth spokesperson, Larry Sanders, who called for“debate not expulsion”.

Devulapalli said accusations of transphobia, which she denies, had contributed to a culture of fear within the party. “People are afraid of being bullied online and being cast out of the party. But speaking up calmly, rationally and with compassion is important.”

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Source: The Guardian