Emily Andrea Melanie Brothers [1] (born 1964, Merseyside) [2] is a British Labour politician who stood in the Sutton and Cheam constituency in the 2015 general election and Isle of Wight East constituency in the 2024 general election. [3] She is the first openly transgender Labour Party candidate to run for Parliament. [4]
Brothers was born on Merseyside. [2] Diagnosed with aniridia, a condition affecting the iris, at six months old, she spent extended periods in hospital and lost her sight in childhood. [2] At seven she became a weekly boarder at a Catholic school for blind and partially sighted children, and later studied at Teesside University, where she became involved in student politics.
Until February 2014, she was programme head at the Equality and Human Rights Commission, responsible for health and local government. Previously she worked at the Disability Rights Commission and the RNIB. She is an active member of the Greater London Association of Disabled People and former president of the National Federation of the Blind of the United Kingdom. [5] She is on the board of the Community Network charity.
She was one of a number of disabled delegates to the Labour conference in 2014 who complained about a lack of BSL interpreters, disabled delegates not being seated in the most accessible part of the conference hall, and problems with accessible information. [6]
She gave an interview to Pink News in December 2014 in which she spoke about her transgender experience and her campaigning for disabled people and the value and the importance of the NHS. She also gave an interview to London TV station London Live in which she said she did not know if Ed Miliband knew about her transgender background, but that she was confident that he would be supportive. [7] Ed Miliband welcomed her candidacy, saying she had long been a courageous campaigner on disability rights and now on trans issues too. [8]
In response Rod Liddle of The Sun , in a December 2014 column, asked how she knew "she was the wrong sex", since she was blind, [9] her response was: "My position is that I think it's a cheap comment that doesn't surprise me coming from The Sun. But my concern is how other transgender people feel about these comments, particularly those who are going through the transitioning process and are fearful of other people's reactions, and fearful of being ridiculed." [10] In a statement later Liddle said: "I wish Emily the very best and I'd definitely vote for her if I lived in Sutton and Cheam. I am sorry for the poor joke!" [11]
In the 2015 general election in Sutton and Cheam she secured 5,546 votes, 4 percentage points more than her Labour predecessor in 2010. A few weeks later, the Independent Press Standards Organisation (IPSO), after upholding a complaint from the charity Trans Media Watch, obliged The Sun to publish its decision to censure Liddle for also being discriminatory towards Brothers in a second column, published in January 2015, supposedly apologising for the first. The IPSO considered Liddle to have breached its editors' code. [12] [13] In the 2024 general election in Isle of Wight East she came fourth behind the Conservatives, Reform, and the Green Party.
Brothers married in 1993, and had two children. The marriage broke down after she revealed her desire to live as a woman. She subsequently underwent hormone and voice therapy, and had sex reassignment surgery in Thailand in 2008. [2]
She said that her ex-wife was very supportive and understanding, and that she had two children, William and Victoria, who were also supportive. [9]
Kellie Maloney is an English boxing manager and promoter, and television personality. Maloney managed Lennox Lewis, who won the undisputed heavyweight championship of the world, between 1989 and 2001. This made Maloney the first Briton to manage a British heavyweight champion in almost a century.
Rod Liddle is an English journalist, and an associate editor of The Spectator. He was an editor of BBC Radio 4's Today programme. His published works include Too Beautiful for You (2003), Love Will Destroy Everything (2007), The Best of Liddle Britain and the semi-autobiographical Selfish Whining Monkeys (2014). He has presented television programmes, including The New Fundamentalists, The Trouble with Atheism, and Immigration Is A Time Bomb.
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Sutton and Cheam is a constituency in Greater London represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2024 by Luke Taylor, a Liberal Democrat.
Janice Turner is a British journalist, and a columnist and feature writer for The Times.
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Trans Media Watch (TMW) is a British charity founded in 2009 to improve media coverage of transgender and intersex issues. By improving media coverage, TMW strives to "foster social acceptance and civil recognition for trans persons", and to prevent the "material consequences" of misrepresentation.
This article addresses the history of transgender people in the United States from prior to Western contact until the present. There are a few historical accounts of transgender people that have been present in the land now known as the United States at least since the early 1600s. Before Western contact, some Native American tribes had third gender people whose social roles varied from tribe to tribe. People dressing and living differently from the gender roles typical of their sex assigned at birth and contributing to various aspects of American history and culture have been documented from the 17th century to the present day. In the 20th and 21st centuries, advances in gender-affirming surgery as well as transgender activism have influenced transgender life and the popular perception of transgender people in the United States.
The 2015 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday, 7 May 2015 to elect 650 members of Parliament (MPs) to the House of Commons. The Conservative Party, led by prime minister David Cameron, won an unexpected majority victory of ten seats; they had been leading a coalition government with the Liberal Democrats. It was the last general election to be held before the UK voted to leave the European Union (EU) in June 2016.
Christin Scarlett Milloy is a Canadian politician and LGBT activist. She was the first political candidate at the Canadian provincial level to publicly identify as transgender and ran for the Ontario Libertarian Party. In 2014, she helped lead the Trans Pride march. She is a member of the Trans Lobby Group, which lobbied at Queen's Park to pass Toby's Law, and has campaigned for transgender rights and gay-straight alliances for LGBT youth.
Zoe O'Connell is a British Liberal Democrat politician, and a prominent campaigner for transgender rights.
The following is a timeline of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) history in the 21st century.
The following is a timeline of transgender history. Transgender history dates back to the first recorded instances of transgender individuals in ancient civilizations. However, the word transgenderism did not exist until 1965 when coined by psychiatrist John F. Oliven of Columbia University in his 1965 reference work Sexual Hygiene and Pathology; the timeline includes events and personalities that may be viewed as transgender in the broadest sense, including third gender and other gender-variant behavior, including ancient or modern precursors from the historical record.
Bobbie Lea Bennett was a disability and transgender rights activist. In 1978, she drove from San Diego, California to Baltimore, Maryland to demand that Medicare honor its agreement to reimburse payment for her sex reassignment surgery; her successful claim brought visibility to efforts to secure rights for transgender people.