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Emily Bridges calls British Cycling "failed organisation", says trans women have been "banned" as new 'Open' category announced

"...all you do is take money from petrochemical companies and engage in culture wars", says Bridges in a scathing attack on British Cycling as the governing body launches its new transgender and non-binary participation policy...

Transgender cyclist Emily Bridges has launched a scathing attack on British Cycling, calling it a "failed organisation" and raised concerns that trans women have been "banned" from participating on the same day that the governing body announced a new transgender policy that will see the introduction of a new 'Open' category for all transgender and non-binary individuals in competitive events.

British Cycling announced today morning the introduction of a new 'Open' category alongside the women's category. This means that the current men's category will be consolidated into the Open category, with the female category only open to "those whose sex was assigned female at birth and transgender men who are yet to begin hormone therapy". This will only apply in competition. 

However, Bridges released a prior statement in response on her Instagram, saying she was "done with this whole conversation being on their terms, and being controlled by them."

> Participating in cycling as a transgender woman: a cyclist's experience

"British Cycling has just banned us from racing," read her post. "They have no authority to control this conversation anymore. Does it surprise me that the same organisation funded directly by a state that ships vulnerable refugees to Rwanda, violently clamps down on any political dissent that they disapprove of, or starves their people? No, of course, it doesn't."

"The same organisation with actively homophobic coaches, who encouraged eating disorders and did nothing about any bullying between its riders. The same organisation where elite riders influence their policy when it doesn't fit their entitled and narrow worldview, with no ability for nuance or any desire to question the view that they've been told since birth."

She continued: "British Cycling is a failed organisation, the racing scene is dying under your watch and all you do is take money from petrochemical companies and engage in culture wars. You don't care about making sport more diverse, you want to make yourself look better and you're even failing at that. Cycling is still one of the whitest, straightest sports out there, and you couldn't care less."

> British Cycling + Shell discussed on the road.cc Podcast

"This is a violent act," she said. "British Cycling are supporting this, they are furthering a genocide against us. Bans from sport is how it starts, look at what is going on in America. It starts with sports bans, then youth and general healthcare and then bans from public life through bathroom bans. Just look at the situation, and who is on your side. When literal Nazis, conspiracy theorists and those who want our eradication are on your side, surely that should give you pause?"

> Transgender cyclist Emily Bridges breaks silence to question “alleged ineligibility”

Bridges had been cleared by British Cycling for racing at the National Omnium Championships last year in April her testosterone levels were sufficiently, but then suddenly the organisation made a U-turn on its decision and suspended its transgender policy with immediate effect. It said that the system was “unfair on all women riders and poses a challenge to the integrity of racing,” and thus a nine-month review was initiated.

Today, the national governing body has announced two new policies — one for competitive activity and another for non-competitive activity. For the latter, British Cycling says that it will not discriminate based on gender and allow riders to participate in the category they identify as.

However for competitive activity, it introduced the new Open category, alongside the Male and Female categories. All transgender and non-binary individuals (except those whose sex was assigned female at birth) can now only compete only in the Open category.

Existing Race Licences held by transgender women will continue to be valid until the  new policy comes into force. British Cycling said that it is working closely with these individuals to support their continued participation in events following the change in policy.

> "Dumped by email": Mother of transgender cyclist Emily Bridges speaks out after British Cycling decision to suspend trans policy

British Cycling apologised to all transgender and non-binary for the "uncertainty and upset" that they felt due to its actions.

"Our aim in creating our policies has always been to advance and promote equality, diversity and inclusion, while at the same time prioritising fairness of competition. This aim has not changed: it has been central to our review and we remain committed to this vital work," said British Cycling.

British Cycling CEO, Jon Dutton, said: "Our new policies are the product of a robust nine-month review process which we know will have a very real-world impact for our community both now and in the future. We understand that this will be particularly difficult for many of our trans and non-binary riders, and our commitment to them today is twofold.

"First, we will continue to assess our policy annually and more frequently as the medical science develops, and will continue to invite those impacted to be an integral part of those conversations. Second, we will also continue to ensure that our non-competitive activities provide a positive and welcoming environment, where everyone can feel like they belong and are respected in our community, and take action to eradicate discrimination from the sport.

"I am confident that we have developed policies that both safeguard the fairness of cyclesport competition, whilst ensuring all riders have opportunities to participate."

British Cycling also asserted that a full medical science review, followed by an assessment of the practical changes and support needed to ensure the policy’s successful implementation was conducted, alongside a targeted consultation consisiting of 14 focus groups.

> “Trans rights are human rights,” says Rapha – “all athletes should have the opportunity to race”

However, Bridges argued that while she agreed that there needs to be a nuanced policy discussion and continue to conduct research, it hadn't happened. "Research isn't being viewed critically, or any discussion about the relevance of the data to specific sports. Any discussion is inherently political and driven by bad faith actors, and the whole discussion is framed by the media who are driven through engagement by hate and funding from far-right ultra capitalists," she said.

Bridges also added that for the last two years, she has "given up her body for science", and that "new, actual and relevant" data will be coming out soon.

In April last year, Emily Bridges' mother commented on British Cycling's treatment of her daughter, simply saying "dumped by email", after the national governing body's decision to suspend its transgender policy.

UK's largest network of LGBTQIA+ cyclists PRiDE OUT had also accused the body of "bending to political pressure and cowing to the transphobic gender-critical movement".

Bridges finished her Instagram post: "It terrifies me to exist at the moment, I have friends getting hate crimed all the time, and my reality is that I can't look ahead to the future or make plans because I don't know if I'll be allowed to live that long.

"Do you have any idea what that does to someone psychologically? To constantly see your existence being put up for debate, and the other side openly calling for our eradication? I don't even know if I want to race my bike any more, the danger and everything that would come with racing makes it a pretty hard thing to justify to myself. But you have no right on telling me when I am done. This is my decision and mine alone."

Adwitiya joined road.cc in 2023 as a news writer after graduating with a masters in journalism from Cardiff University. His dissertation focused on active travel, which soon threw him into the deep end of covering everything related to the two-wheeled tool, and now cycling is as big a part of his life as guitars and football. He has previously covered local and national politics for Voice Wales, and also likes to writes about science, tech and the environment, if he can find the time. Living right next to the Taff trail in the Welsh capital, you can find him trying to tackle the brutal climbs in the valleys.

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157 comments

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MattieKempy replied to Vo2Maxi | 1 year ago
4 likes
Vo2Maxi wrote:

The cold reality is that it's not fair on cis women if you compete in athletic competition with them.

Nice post, considered and genuine. However I have to disagree with the quote from your post above  - it's clearly not the cold reality, as the research shows. I

You're absolutely right, it's a huge grey area and while BC have been utterly, categorically shite in most other things they've done of late, with this they're between the biggest rock you can imagine and the hardest place in the world! Whatever they do will be the wrong thing.

Emily Bridges' comments are unfortunate and in unnecessary language but she's clearly hurt, feels victimised by BC and doesn't know where to turn. A more considered comment in the next few days would help, but you have to sympathise with the pain she's feeling on top of what I can only imagine would be the massive mindf*ck of growing up in the wrong body.

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Vo2Maxi replied to MattieKempy | 1 year ago
4 likes

First rule of life is that feeling hurt and hard done by is NOT proof you are right.
I have no doubt whatsoever about the strength of her feelings, but she's calling it a 'trans genocide' which is clearly nuts. She's just lashing out and mudslinging, the reference to 'racism' in cycling is utter tosh. Not many black people race bikes, ergo cycling is racist. It's playground politics, and actually offensive.
How about if she gets to compete in women's sport, and then female athletes who've had their sport stolen from them commit suicide? Who's right then?
Hysterical arguments are never good ones, and when you really look at it, it becomes my rights are bigger than your rights. And that's not right!

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Vo2Maxi replied to MattieKempy | 1 year ago
3 likes

Part of what's distressing for her here, is the change of mind displayed by BC, which gave her false hope.
But of course that was borne out a desire to 'be kind and inclusive'. That's what's at the heart of the basic bogusness of woke.
Everyone needs to step back and take a deep breath and get real.

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kevinmorice replied to MattieKempy | 1 year ago
0 likes

You need to read more of the research. 

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muppetkeeper | 1 year ago
5 likes

It appears to me that British Cycling had 2 choices,

1. Let people who identify as women race in the women's category, and not have a single person who was genetically female at birth be able to compete fairly in racing.

2. Create a category for anyone who was genetically male at birth, and allow all of the genetically "advantaged" race together.

I'm pleased that I didn't have to make the decision, but I can't see that they had much choice.  

I dislike quite a lot about how British Cycling operate, I have worked for them in the past and they do / did have issues around sexism, bullying etc etc, but even with that dislike I have to say the open category is fair.

The attack from Emily has some merit, but BC can't help it if Sport England are funded by the government, and that government are a bunch of idiot.  They would have chosen a different sponsor to Shell if anyone else had been interested, but they weren't.

 

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Secret_squirrel replied to muppetkeeper | 1 year ago
4 likes
muppetkeeper wrote:

It appears to me that British Cycling had 2 choices,

1. Let people who identify as women race in the women's category, and not have a single person who was genetically female at birth be able to compete fairly in racing.

2. Create a category for anyone who was genetically male at birth, and allow all of the genetically "advantaged" race together.

Really?  There's half a dozen other options from other sports I can think of off the top of my head.   Golf has handicapping, motoracing has multiple classes in the same race.  Boxing has weight classification.   There are literally dozens of models for non-binary classification in sport.   The fact that neither you or BC considered them is a failure of imagination and will.

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Vo2Maxi replied to Secret_squirrel | 1 year ago
6 likes

Handicapping isn't used in top level golf and it wouldn't work in top level cycling. Top competitive sport is hard and even brutal, it's an expression of human limits, it's about bring the best with no blurring.
The handicapping of which you speak already exists, in having men's and women's events.
I used to be 1st Cat when it meant getting my head kicked in by domestic Pros in Pro/1/2 races, and I loved it. In later life I've loved handicapped circuit racing with girls, boys, adults and old codgers (me) and it's wonderful. Inclusive and rith mentoring. But not for top level sport, and of course that's what Emily craves, to be fully seen as a woman in top level races. But she's trans woman, and there's a physical difference which can't be artificially made 'fair'.
And you can't compare boxing with cycling, bigger guy is always gonna beat a smaller guy, whereas in cycling fat sprinters can compete meaningfully with skinny climbers.
You're comparing chalk and cheese.

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Robert Hardy replied to Secret_squirrel | 1 year ago
1 like

But surely where we are considering Emily Bridges we are not in golf handicap territory. She is a contender for top elite competition. Golf is having to confront the issue of transgender golfers taking major women's professional golf trophies. Maybe they don't have an advantage over birth gendered women, but if transgender women start routinely taking major women's trophies then clearly they need a category of their own or compete in open competition.

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Vo2Maxi replied to muppetkeeper | 1 year ago
1 like

Great post. Wonder if I know you....? Only kidding! 😉
And I agree with your reference to Shell, it's very easy to demonise an energy company, but if it weren't for them we'd still be living (almost) in the dark ages. ALL of us.
Oil and gas was the energy of then, demanded by all of us, and like it or not, companies like Shell will probably be the clean energy providers of the future. They're not baby eaters?
Again, it's this woke hysteria which seems to hate everything we are and have been. We're a work in progress.

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marmotte27 replied to Vo2Maxi | 1 year ago
3 likes

"Oil and gas was the energy of then, demanded by all of us, and like it or not, companies like Shell will probably be the clean energy providers of the future."

You lost me there.

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stonechat | 1 year ago
6 likes

Common sense.

 

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planetjanet | 1 year ago
10 likes

Absolutely the right decision by BC, thank goodness. 

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spen | 1 year ago
2 likes

So now, according to british cycling, a trans man is a woman and a trans woman is a man.  Way to insult everyone in one fell swoop!  Bascically they've set up a system in which trans women are marginalised and, as a result of hormone treatments, put at an unfair competitive disadvantage.  Well done to all!

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Mungecrundle replied to spen | 1 year ago
10 likes

Genuinely sorry for Emily and other transgender athletes who are now facing competion in an open classification where they will most likely be at a hormone induced disadvantage. However, it was always going to be unfair to someone. There is no correct answer, this one seems to be least worst for the majority of female by birth athletes and credibility of the sport.

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Vo2Maxi replied to Mungecrundle | 1 year ago
0 likes

Exactly that.

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Vo2Maxi replied to spen | 1 year ago
6 likes

No, I think BC have said trans men can compete with men, or even with women (not that they'd want to, I get that) so long as they're not taking testosterone?
It's a minefield and it's a conundrum (unsolvable) in terms of 'feelings'. Just because you have strong feelings about something, it doesn't mean you're inherently right. It's the difference between subjectivity and objectivity?
But ultimately, you cannot have women's sport utterly wrecked by trans women who essentially have male bodies.

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kevinmorice replied to spen | 1 year ago
4 likes

No. A trans man is still a woman. And can compete as such right up until the day they take testosterone. At which point they are banned from competition under the doping regulations. 

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Vo2Maxi replied to spen | 1 year ago
4 likes

By definition, in transitioning, trans women have marginalised THEMSELVES, and then demanded everyone else fall into line and pick up the pieces for them. They're demanding special treatment . Special treatment (social acceptance etc) can only go so far. No one forced Emily to transition. She would have known what the gender rules in sport were. She's effectively changed the way she self-identifies and then demanded the rules be changed just for her.
Also worth pointing out that not all trans women feel the same way about this. All we hear from are the very vocal ones. There seems to be no recognition from them that they are effectively putting a bomb under women's sport.
I think bit by bit they'll carve a niche for themselves and trans women will have their own races etc. But it's THEY who'll have to put in most of the hard yards, you cannot simply keep having everything given to you at others' expense.

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Robert Hardy replied to spen | 1 year ago
2 likes

A great many people are placed at a disadvantage in, or have to give up competitive sport by their choices of treatment for medical or medicalised conditions. I don't see that people having issues with gender dysmorphia have a right for more special accomodation.

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Sriracha | 1 year ago
12 likes

Cleaving to assertions which are unequivocally false ("banned", violence", "genocide") hardly lends credence to the rest of what Bridges asserts as true.

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MissyChrissy | 1 year ago
3 likes

I look forward to hearing complaints from the men who have had 'their' category supplanted by those pesky trans, non-binary and intersex riders.

Still don't see what's wrong with Male, Female, and Misc. categories....

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muppetkeeper replied to MissyChrissy | 1 year ago
1 like

I doubt you will hear much. Just the odd crap white middle aged man who would have finished 43rd in a race who now finished 44th. 

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ShutTheFrontDawes replied to muppetkeeper | 1 year ago
0 likes
muppetkeeper wrote:

I doubt you will hear much. Just the odd crap white middle aged man who would have finished 43rd in a race who now finished 44th. 

The 'open' approach is being adopted only at the elite level, so not even that.

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lonpfrb | 1 year ago
6 likes

However disappointed one might be to be enabled by a new category that removes any suggestion of, or demonstratrable, unfairness it's not going to provide a rational debate or general acceptance to say "genocide against us"!

I suspect that most rational people would agree that inclusion is already being provided and a science led approach to future arrangements which is all that any sporting organisation can do.

That's as non-political as it is possible to be, and pays no attention to mainstream or social media agendas.

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spen replied to lonpfrb | 1 year ago
2 likes

When has sport, especially at an elite level, been fair?  The Olympics, Tdf etc are basically genetic freak shows.

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Sriracha replied to spen | 1 year ago
6 likes

Ah, the old "sport is unfair because there's a winner" argument. Now with the addendum, "therfore make it exponentially unfairer still."

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yupiteru | 1 year ago
12 likes

The correct decision has been made, as post puberty anyone born male will have a mechanical advantage in a sport like cycling, due to the wider pelvis and head of femur changes in post pubescent females to make allowances for child birth.

No amount of testosterone reduction or regulation will change this significant advantage and I am sure Emily is quite aware of all this.

 

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Secret_squirrel replied to yupiteru | 1 year ago
3 likes
yupiteru wrote:

The correct decision has been made, as post puberty anyone born male will have a mechanical advantage in a sport like cycling, due to the wider pelvis and head of femur changes in post pubescent females to make allowances for child birth.

No amount of testosterone reduction or regulation will change this significant advantage and I am sure Emily is quite aware of all this.

Please provide research to back up your statements?

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Yorkiescot replied to Secret_squirrel | 1 year ago
3 likes

If you take time to research it there is a lot of scientific evidence to show that makes gain an advantage over females at an early age. Sharron Davies has led the campaign to ensure fairness for women in sport and has a lot of the studies referenced on her twitter account. It makes for a lot of interesting reading and has no doubt contributed to several sports barring trans women from competing against biological women

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srchar | 1 year ago
19 likes

There are two things I don't understand here.

  1. Emily must know, deep down, that she has a biological advantage over her female competitors, so she is, at best, deceiving herself. At worst, she doesn't care about her impact on the female athletes she (unfairly, IMHO) competes against.
  2. She's claiming to be banned from a category literally called "Open".

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