Leader of Green group claims party ban

A woman with short dark blonde hair is pictured in a garden setting with a wooden fence behind her and a large plant over her right shoulder. Image source, Hereford City Council
Image caption,

Councillor Diana Toynbee has claimed she has been banned from the Green Party

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The leader of the Green group on Herefordshire Council has claimed she has been banned from her own party for her views on gender.

In a statement released on Friday, Councillor Diana Toynbee said she had been barred from serving as a Green councillor "for at least six months".

In an X post sent on 25 November, Toynbee said there was "nothing right wing about child safeguarding and respecting women" and "nothing more anti-feminist than saying a woman is no more than a costume, identity or fantasy".

The BBC has approached the Green Party for comment.

The Green Party's rights and responsibilities page states "trans men are men, trans women are women, and that non-binary identities exist and are valid".

The party also supports making it easier for trans people to change their legal status without the need for a Gender Reassignment Certificate (GRC).

'My priority has not changed'

Toynbee led the nine-member group after her predecessor Ellie Chowns was elected as MP for North Herefordshire in July last year.

In her statement, addressing the ban, she said: "The central party establishment has ruled that I must be punished for my views on gender and safeguarding, and this is the painful culmination of years of intimidation."

She will now join the Independents for Herefordshire (i4H) group on the council, "with whom I share values of freedom of expression and independent-mindedness", she added.

Toynbee said she had been "touched by the huge amount of support I receive from people from all backgrounds and views, who want politicians with minds of their own who don't pretend to believe things they don't believe".

"My priority has not changed - to serve the people and nature of Herefordshire," she added.

"I look forward to continuing this work within the Independent group, whose welcome I much appreciate."

Following Toynbee's decision to join i4h, it leaves both the Greens and the independent group with eight councillors apiece.

The Conservative Party has as a minority cabinet with 20 councillors, while the Liberal Democrats has 12.

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