Bringing back the topic to check what's happening after the Supreme Court UK decision.
There is a former MP, Valerie Wilms, who was a member of the Greens but left them due to their stance on Self-ID. The person is a TW but transitioned so early (in the 90s) and never said a word about it that it didn't register in public (so V. Wilms said)
Wilms published a biography and revealed being a TW and that the Green party's stance is not hers.
It's also mentioned that early next year there is supposed to be an evaluation of the Self-ID law, so a new possibility to bring the discussion to the forefront again.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2025/04/18/german-mp-trans-secret-gender-identity-bundestag/
I actually hadn't heard of the person but now that I saw the article in the Telegraph, I checked some news in German and it is covered, too.
https://www.deutschlandfunk.de/vermutlich-erste-transfrau-im-bundestag-kritisiert-selbstbestimmungsgesetz-100.html
In the pro-woke TAZ, the article about the SC decision was remarkably calm.
It was very factual, except for the final paragraph:
https://taz.de/Urteil-in-Grossbritannien/!6079260&s=supreme%2Bcourt/
There the text refers to the topic of passports:
"Die Debatte, ob Transrechte zum Nachteil von Frauenrechten gehen, wird in Großbritannien besonders engagiert geführt, weil das Land kein Meldewesen kennt und keine Personalausweise mit Geschlechtseintrag. Viele Transpersonen leben somit einfach im anderen Geschlecht, ohne sich das je amtlich bestätigen lassen zu müssen. Dies kann zu Problemen führen, die in Ländern mit Ausweispflicht nicht auftreten"
my translation:
The debate, whether trans right impinge on women's rights, has feelings running high in Great Britain, because the country does not have a citizen's registry and no "gender" (it should be sex) listed in passports /IDs.
Many trans people thus "live as the opposite gender" without any official documents. This can lead to problems that do not happen in countries with mandatory ID".
Of course that's wrong, and the writer did not understand the ruling.
Germany has mandatory birth certificate, mandatory ID and everyone has to be registered at their place of residence so that the local administration knows how many people live where.
The problems regarding equality and representation and access to women's spaces are pretty much the same as in UK.