Labour’s Shadow Mental Health Minister, Rosena Allin-Khan, accepted a £5,000 donation from the London branch of the Young Presidents Organisation (YPO) in August last year… an organisation known as the ‘Lucky Sperm Club’ because its membership is made up of “rich kids whose daddies have given them jobs”.
Newly-emerged photos also reveal the YPO ran at least one members’ meeting where “naked women were hired to parade around … carrying paint palettes and brushes so that men could proudly paint their names on various parts of the women’s bodies“. In the pictures, women dressed only in revealing underwear can be seen covered in paint, with members’ names scrawled all over their bodies…
The event – which was organised by the YPO’s US branch in 2015 – led to one attendee writing a blog post in which she claimed “hundreds of YPO business leaders [were] there”, and that “no one put a stop [to] it. Labour has already returned hundreds of thousands in donations from a finance chief who commented on the size of a colleague’s breasts. They also handed back £16,000 to a city lawyer over disputed links to a sanctioned Russian bank. Will Allin-Khan hand back the cash? It’d be the third donation-related bust-up in about a week…
Yesterday it emerged the Labour Party had suspended the membership of Gil House pending investigation for allegedly engaging in prejudicial conduct that was “grossly detrimental to the party”. Gil’s crime? Insisting that “only women experience the menopause”.
Yet just last month, seven Labour Party MPs made very similar statements during the World Menopause Month debate. Throughout the discussion Carolyn Harris, Judith Cummins, Tonia Antoniazzi, Jessica Morden, Alex Davies-Jones, Dr. Rosena Allin-Khan, and Karin Smith made clear that the menopause is an issue unique to women. Who knew that their remarks were so controversial?
This utterly bonkers row is causing huge internal upset. One embarrassed Labour source blasted the party’s position on Trans issues stating:
“UK Labour rules, unlike the actual law, are based on gender and not sex – therefore they go behind the law, or as they would like the law, just like Stonewall does.”
Gil House, a loyal Labour Party member who was planning to stand as a councillor, has now resigned from the party.
In the hour long debate the Labour MPs failed to reference the trans community once. Instead Alex Davies-Jones insisted that “the menopause is an entirely natural biological process“ and Carolyn Harris pointed out that “the menopause is something that every woman will experience at some point in her lifetime”. Guido worries that their statement of biological facts means they are Trans Exclusionary Radical Feminists (TERFs) in the eyes of the party activists who reported Gil House. Is the Labour Party going to suspend these seven MPs for prejudicial conduct?