Rosemary Clare Duffield (born 1 July 1971) is a British politician who was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for Canterbury in 2017. After resigning as a member of the Labour Party in September 2024, she is an independent.
In 2015 she stood for Labour in the St Stephen's ward of Canterbury City Council where both seats were won by the Conservative Party.
Duffield was appointed Parliamentary Private Secretary (PPS) to Dawn Butler, then the Shadow Secretary of State for Women and Equalities. On 13 June 2018 she was one of six MPs to resign from the Opposition front bench to vote in favour of the UK joining the European Economic Area and thereby remaining in the single market, as the party had instructed its MPs to abstain.
In July 2017 she appeared on RT UK, a television network funded by the Russian government. Duffield later apologised to the LGBTQ community for doing so.
Duffield is opposed to new grammar schools, and Eleven-plus exams. She was criticised after it was reported that both her children had gone to grammar schools.
Duffield voted for the UK remaining within the European Union (EU) in the 2016 UK EU membership referendum. In the indicative votes on 27 March 2019, she voted for a customs union with the EU and a referendum on a Brexit withdrawal agreement, but abstained on the "Common Market 2.0" proposal.
In September 2018 Duffield attended a march protesting against Labour's stance on antisemitism and said that MPs could strike if the party did not endorse the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA)'s definition of antisemitism. She was criticised by some local party members for her attendance. In July 2019 the chair of her constituency Labour Party said her language was "incredibly reckless" after she agreed with a remark by the Chair of the Jewish Labour Movement that Labour "probably is" institutionally antisemitic.
In October 2019 Duffield succeeded Jess Phillips as Chair of the Women's Parliamentary Labour Party.
She has been a member of the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Select Committee since March 2020 and was previously a member of the Work and Pensions Select Committee between June 2018 and November 2019 and the Women and Equalities Committee between September 2017 and June 2018 and March and May 2020.
On 14 April 2020 Duffield was appointed a Labour whip by the party’s leader, Keir Starmer. She resigned from the position a month later after breaking COVID-19 lockdown rules when she met her married partner whilst they were living in separate households. Duffield apologised and said she accepted her actions constituted a breach of the law at the time.
In July 2020, Duffield voiced in Parliament concerns about nitrous oxide being sold to and used recreationally by young people, calling for tighter restrictions on its sale. Duffield said that use of the drug had become "much more prevalent" during the 2020 COVID-19 lockdown and cited health concerns over its use.
In June 2024 Duffield announced that she would not be attending local for the general election because of concerns about her security, referring to "constant trolling, spite and misinterpretation".
On 28 September 2024, Duffield announced that she had resigned the Labour whip and would sit as an independent. In her resignation letter, she criticised Starmer's "cruel and unnecessary policies", "sleaze, nepotism and apparent avarice", and "hypocrisy" over his acceptance of gifts. She also described it as "frankly embarrassing"
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The Sunday Times described her resignation of the whip, less than three months after the election, as making her "the fastest MP to jump ship after a general election in modern political history".
In September 2021, in an interview on BBC Radio 4, Duffield said that: "There are men, activists, out there who are married to women who call themselves the Q word queer, and they appropriate gay culture in a way that is deeply offensive to quite a lot in the gay movement, the gay rights movement". Her comments were cited in an article on biphobia in PinkNews which said: "Comments like these invalidate the identity of bi/pan/queer men in different-gender relationships." Talking to the screenwriter and anti-transgender activist Graham Linehan in the same month, Duffield described non-binary gender as "choosing not to be male or female". She said that women should be asked "Why are you rejecting mostly being female, being a woman"?
In October 2021 Duffield attended the first annual conference of the LGB Alliance where she spoke on a panel about free speech alongside her fellow MP Joanna Cherry. In October 2022 The Daily Telegraph reported that, with her fellow "gender critical" parliamentarians Cherry and Anne Jenkin, she was setting up a cross-party "biology policy unit", "to help ensure policies across the public sector that are based on gender identity theory are documented and scrutinised".
On 20 January 2023 Duffield wrote a column in which she stated that being a member of the Labour Party is like being in an "abusive relationship" and that she feels the party has a "woman problem" after she was criticised for voicing her opposition to the First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon's Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill.
In 2020 several Labour groups called for the Labour Parliamentary party whip to be withdrawn from Duffield, arguing that her views are transphobic. In October 2022, Labour Students, Young Labour and LGBT+ Labour urged the party to withdraw the whip from Duffield. Labour Students said that "Duffield's behaviour has gone beyond the pale and we echo LGBT+ Labour's calls that she should lose the whip" and that she has "consistently gone out of her way to damage the trans community, including appearing at the conference of an anti-trans lobbying group." In the same month Kent Labour Students issued a statement calling for her to lose the Labour whip and to be replaced as the Labour candidate at the next election.
In November 2023 it was reported by KentOnline that Duffield was being investigated by the Labour Party for alleged antisemitism for liking a tweet by Graham Linehan which itself was a response to a tweet by the comedian Eddie Izzard. The Times reported that Duffield had denied allegations of anti-semitism, stating that the tweet had been "sarcastically mocking" of Izzard's reference to trans people being targeted during the Holocaust. Duffield issued a statement in January 2024, confirming that the complaint had been dismissed by the Labour Party's National Executive Committee.
In 2024, 33 student Labour clubs issued a statement condemning "in the strongest terms" the party's national executive committee for dismissing an investigation of Duffield on allegations of antisemitism and transphobia, and said Labour "cannot be a progressive party when we are endorsing rhetoric that creates hate and misery for our trans siblings."
Duffield said in a series of tweets in January 2022 that she was "considering her future in the Labour party very carefully" because of the "obsessive harassment" received from party members and a lack of support from the party leadership against the "constant stream of fictional and factional bile that is written about me".
In June 2024 a man was sentenced to two suspended jail sentences of eight weeks and a 12-month community order for making death threats against Duffield and the author J. K. Rowling.
Position on transgender rights
Staff issues
Views
Complaints
Harassment
Personal life
External links
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