It's certainly interesting listening to all sides of this debate. Apparently opposing sides feel that Keir Starmer is not speaking up for them:
Labour members plead with Keir Starmer, Marsha de Cordova and the party to come out swinging for trans rights in the wake of alleged Tory attacks
https://www.pinknews.co.uk/2020/06/19/keir-starmer-trans-rights-gender-recognition-act-labour-party-marsha-de-cordova/Keir Starmer’s woman problem. The Labour leader has done nothing to tackle trans extremists' assault on sex-based rights
https://unherd.com/2020/09/keir-starmers-women-problem/?=refinnarLabour’s official policy is apparently still promoting trans equality but defending powers in equality law that let organisations exclude trans women from all-female spaces in exceptional circumstances.
One definition of a woman is offered here:
https://clareflourish.wordpress.com/2020/04/16/woman-transwoman-definition/Some trans activists rejecting the patriarchy clearly expected unquestioning support from biological women who also reject the patriarchy. The response from some activists (who claim to be women) for not getting that unquestioning support is to threaten women who disagree with them with rape. Wonder if there is any evidence of biological women threatening trans activists with rape? If there isn't evidence of that phenomena, that probably goes some way to explaining the need for single sex spaces rather than the alternative, which is to only exclude male criminals and allow all other men into female spaces. Male biology seems to lead to some unique problems for female biology.
What's troubling is having to pin hopes on Liz Truss/ the Tories on this issue depending on Keir Starmer's future statements on this issue. It might get to the point where I will have to vote Tory for the first time since I have been voting, despite all the Tory party's other failings, of which there are too many to list.