Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

I was victimised after whistleblowing about Civil Service impartiality on sex and gender issues

75 replies

EleanorFrances · 19/05/2024 21:00

My name is Eleanor Frances and I was forced out of the Civil Service after whistleblowing about discrimination and breaches of impartiality on sex and gender issues.

I joined the Civil Service five years ago, having previously completed a PhD in Engineering and worked as a chartered engineer. I was employed by what was then the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS), and later by the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT). I managed a team of policy officials and worked with government ministers. I was successful in my role, and I ‘exceeded’ expectations in my performance reviews.

Civil servants are bound by a strict duty of impartiality. I was proud to fulfil this duty, and it was fundamental to my work. However, I became increasingly concerned about what I saw as significant breaches of impartiality, and discrimination on the basis of sex, belief, and other protected characteristics. I raised formal concerns to my department’s leadership, in which I cited:

  • A politicised 'climate of fear’ around Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI), with the risk of negative professional consequences for civil servants who questioned the institutional position on issues such as sex and gender;
  • The adoption of an internal ‘Gender Identity and Intersex’ policy, without proper consultation, following a Stonewall workplace assessment;
  • The policy’s use of politicised language and concepts – for example, defining ‘transphobia’ as ‘including the denial/refusal to accept,’ someone’s gender identity, and thereby compelling civil servants to recognise male people as women;
  • The introduction of ‘self-identification’ in government premises, allowing any male person to access female single-sex facilities, with the threat of disciplinary action against any women who might object;
  • The use of ‘EDI assessments’ in recruitment and promotion to the Senior Civil Service;
  • Another serious breach of impartiality in which several senior civil servants were implicated.
I believe that the Civil Service’s approach to sex and gender issues is not impartial. Government departments officially adopted internal policies which took one side of a major political controversy, and which compelled civil servants to do the same. In doing so, they compromised the privacy, dignity and safety of female staff.

DCMS conducted its own internal investigations. After repeated delays, the department eventually informed me that there had been no discrimination and no breaches of impartiality, and denied that my fears were reasonable. I challenged these findings, citing a number of serious failings in the process and decision, but my appeal was dismissed.

I also sent a letter to the Cabinet Secretary, Simon Case and numerous Permanent Secretaries, on behalf of 42 civil servants who shared my concerns. The response – sent over two months later by the Government Chief People Officer, Fiona Ryland – advised signatories to follow the same departmental processes which had done nothing to resolve my earlier complaint.

After raising concerns, I believe that I was subjected to a sustained pattern of unfair treatment. I was given baseless negative performance feedback, and stripped of my team and responsibilities by the same individuals I had named in my complaint. Senior leaders refused to intervene. Ultimately, I concluded that I had no choice but to resign from my role, ending my career in the Civil Service.

I am now taking DCMS and DSIT to an employment tribunal, claiming discrimination on the grounds of philosophical belief, sex and disability, along with victimisation, protected disclosure detriment and unfair constructive dismissal. My solicitor is Peter Daly at Doyle Clayton, and Counsel is Akua Reindorf KC.

Based on the detailed advice I have received, I am confident that I have a strong case. I am aware that all discrimination claims are difficult to win, and that there will be (as is always the case in litigation) a great deal of information provided in disclosure of which I am currently unaware. But the facts of the case, such as they are known to me now, present good prospects of success.

In an attempt to avoid litigation, I offered to settle my claim for £1 in damages, plus costs, asking only that my employers acknowledge the issues I had raised, apologise, and work with the relevant regulators to address them. This offer was ignored.

I am eager to hear from others who have tried to challenge these issues in the workplace (or decided not to) - especially in the public sector.

Whistleblower ‘forced out’ of Whitehall over gender beliefs

Eleanor Frances claims she was sidelined and rebuked when she challenged ‘politicised culture’ in the civil service

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/05/18/whistleblower-forced-out-of-whitehall-over-gender-beliefs/

OP posts:
Thread gallery
5
QueenofTheBorg · 23/05/2024 13:24

I'm going to contribute to the crowdfunder, good luck.

LlamaDuke · 23/05/2024 13:48

Really wish you lots of luck with your case.
I'm a former Civil Servant and know only too well that the words and policy around it being safe for people to whistleblow, compared to what actually happens in practice are very different, which is sadly what you are experiencing now.
I also spent some time as an Equality and Diversity rep and know that "zero tolerance for bullying and harassment " and "being proactive in implementing reasonable adjustments for those who need them" is the usual bollocks spouted by senior management, who are normally the worst culprits for demonstrating bullying behaviour and failing in their duty of care for staff with disabilities.

anyolddinosaur · 23/05/2024 17:53

£11,017 now, climbing up.

m00ngirl · 23/05/2024 22:18

@EleanorFrances just wondering what your specific job title / policy area was - did you see gender ideology creeping into any of the external policy areas you worked on? (Isn't it DCMS/DSIT that oversee online harms policy, "misinformation", etc... did you see any threats to free speech?)

EllBellWell · 23/05/2024 22:50

I'd like to follow on X. Does anyone have the @?

👏 well done Eleanor

Chchchchnamechange · 23/05/2024 23:02

I worked in Defra many years, now left.

I was in a tricky position as I worked with someone who was active promoting trans ideology, with full support of senior managers, who I think saw it as being inclusive.

While I completely disagreed with this person I valued them as a colleague and definitely would not have wanted them to feel unwelcome or uncomfortable in any way.

However they made me feel uncomfortable and took up a lot of work time discussing and promoting what in my opinion were political ideas.

I expressed my concerns in the staff survey but never anywhere else.

partystress · 23/05/2024 23:03

Just contributed. Hope a victory sees a flowering of SEENs in all departments, especially Education, Health and Justice.

IwantToRetire · 24/05/2024 00:02

EllBellWell · 23/05/2024 22:50

I'd like to follow on X. Does anyone have the @?

👏 well done Eleanor

I'm assuming this is the right Eleanor! https://x.com/Eleanor_Frances

Should be on facebook where all the oldies with money are ... Smile

x.com

https://x.com/Eleanor_Frances

Pancakey · 24/05/2024 00:20

This reply has been withdrawn

This message has been withdrawn at the poster's request

sweetestinthegale · 24/05/2024 07:29

partystress · 23/05/2024 23:03

Just contributed. Hope a victory sees a flowering of SEENs in all departments, especially Education, Health and Justice.

I'm not sure about all of those, but I'm reliably informed that there is a SEEN at DfE. Good luck to them.

Have also contributed.

anyolddinosaur · 24/05/2024 08:36

£11,287. Hope it continues to grow.

Tallisker · 24/05/2024 10:11

Chchchchnamechange · 23/05/2024 23:02

I worked in Defra many years, now left.

I was in a tricky position as I worked with someone who was active promoting trans ideology, with full support of senior managers, who I think saw it as being inclusive.

While I completely disagreed with this person I valued them as a colleague and definitely would not have wanted them to feel unwelcome or uncomfortable in any way.

However they made me feel uncomfortable and took up a lot of work time discussing and promoting what in my opinion were political ideas.

I expressed my concerns in the staff survey but never anywhere else.

Defra are very captured, they have all the arm's-length bodies like the Environment Agency and Natural England who tend to be the tree-hugger types that espouse the rainbow ideology.

Nothing at all wrong with hugging trees and bettering the natural environment, managing environmental damage and protecting farming and fishing, but the ideology is very strong in the department.

One of their (speshul) staff members is suing them for allowing SEEN to exist.

WomanWithoutNeedOfPrefix · 24/05/2024 10:58

True @Tallisker but Defra was also the first that allowed a departmental SEEN to form. Lots of scientists working there who are horrified about how this ideology has taken hold but who have been too scared to speak up for fear of being labelled transphobic. As ever, join SEEN if you can - we are stronger together!

Tallisker · 24/05/2024 11:50

Indeed, @WomanWithoutNeedOfPrefix - we might actually know each other 😁

EleanorFrances · 25/05/2024 19:38

IwantToRetire · 24/05/2024 00:02

I'm assuming this is the right Eleanor! https://x.com/Eleanor_Frances

Should be on facebook where all the oldies with money are ... Smile

That's me! Thank you 🙂

OP posts:
m00ngirl · 25/05/2024 21:43

m00ngirl · 23/05/2024 22:18

@EleanorFrances just wondering what your specific job title / policy area was - did you see gender ideology creeping into any of the external policy areas you worked on? (Isn't it DCMS/DSIT that oversee online harms policy, "misinformation", etc... did you see any threats to free speech?)

@EleanorFrances any response...? I've asked twice. If you don't want to answer just say! 🤪

Truthlikeness · 25/05/2024 21:59

I work for an ALB. My colleague and I have tried to challenge some of the Stonewall influenced policies with no success. I feel the tide is starting to turn slowly and I plan to raise some of their policies which miss-state the law as part of the current government call for evidence.

EleanorFrances · 26/05/2024 12:57

m00ngirl · 25/05/2024 21:43

@EleanorFrances any response...? I've asked twice. If you don't want to answer just say! 🤪

It's probably best that I don't talk about this aspect I'm afraid.

However, the letter sent to the Cabinet Office by SEEN apparently raised the concern that "a 'culture of fear' [...] has subverted government policy [...] staff have 'boasted' to colleagues about 'frustrating ministers’ intentions' [and] are alleged to have attempted to remove contributions to government consultations that relate to sex instead of gender, briefed external groups on how to get around ministerial guidance and divulged internal policy thinking to partisan organisations."

Trans rights activists in Civil Service ‘undermine’ policies, claims gender-critical group

Letter to Cabinet Office says small number of civil servants create ‘culture of fear’ in Whitehall

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/03/03/transgender-rights-activist-civil-service-gender-critical/

OP posts:
m00ngirl · 26/05/2024 13:13

@EleanorFrances interesting, thank you for sharing that! Good luck 💪

mrshoho · 26/05/2024 14:03

All the very best to you Eleanor and thank you for taking this crucial stand. We are all with you and will gladly contribute to the crowd funder.

Lovelyview · 28/05/2024 11:42

Thanks for fighting Eleanor. I have donated to your crowdfunder.

anyolddinosaur · 28/05/2024 22:00

£13,336 now - which is a way of bumping the thread so more people see it. You cant keep bumping your own thread but other people can.

Festivfrenzy · 28/05/2024 23:55

Good luck to you! And thankyou on behalf of all women and girls for standing up to the madness that is everywhere 💪💪

Sparklybutold · 29/05/2024 00:08

Hi Eleanor - i am currently in the middle of a formal complaint with a university owing to prejudice and discrimination centred around gender ideology. The training was completely biased, discriminatory and punitive. The central culprit has now left but is a very active TRA. I will hopefully find out the outcome soon. I have asked for financial comp and a complete rework of the training pathway.

AtrociousCircumstance · 29/05/2024 00:16

Women like you are the suffragettes of our age @EleanorFrances The pride and gratitude I felt when learning about them will be felt by young girls in the future for those, like you, who were brave enough to stand up to the establishment like this.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread