OK so (as well as the very serious problem of deviating from EqA)- I wondered where in CQC’s statutory bases which create CQC as a lawful regulatory body, can they point to themselves having been given any power for inventing or varying the CQC’s own remit/activities?
That power is reserved to Parliament surely.
And surely it represents a variation to CQC’s own legal remit or activities to decide to purposely cease to recognise sex as CQC have said they are doing. Because this materially affects how they could go about their statutory duties - like collecting information and setting standards and inspectIng health and social care services?
Effectively by leaving out sex do they not risk both omitting to fulfil some legal obligations and potentially be acting beyond their powers?
Parliament tends to be very prescriptive and rightly so about what the powers of regulators actually are. So who has actually authorised this?
Has anyone FOI’d to seek the minutes of where the decision to change away from sex to gender was made? Either by their Board of commissioners or by their Chief Exec and Exec team? Also presumably an FOI is needed to see how far across CQC’s activities the use of ‘gender’ to replace sex has gone.
Organisations are free to add extra characteristics beyond the legally protected ones under EqA as Charley says to gather info about trans people’s needs and they certainly should involve trans people as health and social care users, as they do involve other groups. Fine and good.
They would not be free though to ignore or omit or conflate legally protected characteristics.
Likewise I am suggesting any regulator would not be free to act outside of their own legal remit by not fulfilling some of their statutory obligations, if that is the effect of making a change from sex to gender.
And that with Board approval a regulator could add things to their workload on top of their statutory obligations if they wanted to do that- but only on a clearly voluntary basis for them and also that everyone that they regulate or provide services to or whoever they have obligations to as a regulator (which presumably extends as far as the general public) is quite clear that nobody has to comply with this change of or extension to legal remit. Legal remit should remain untouched in this scenario. The rest is optional extras.
In which case, the regulator should make it clear that they have no legal power of enforcement or compulsion for anyone else to accept them working on extra stuff which the law has not obligated them to do.
So does it go beyond their legal powers to adopt gender instead of sex across their work? Especially if they don’t appear to be giving anyone a choice about working within this, eg in their data collection as they have said that they think gender includes sex.