The debate over what is appropriate for children is important, but it has been co-opted at protests using abusive tactics

Drag and cross-dressing have been a part of British cultural expression for centuries. From Shakespeare plays to pantomime dames, and the late Barry Humphries’ creation Dame Edna Everage; playing with representations of gender in all its forms has long been widely enjoyed by audiences. Drag shows are a modern expression of this tradition, which is now being threatened by a coordinated campaign to silence it.

More than 50 family drag events in the UK were targeted by protesters from June last year to this May, according to data gathered by our researchers at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD). Ten shows were cancelled or postponed before they even took place. At the ones that did go ahead, small groups (rarely more than 12) using abusive and confrontational tactics routinely accused parents who were taking their children to the events of supporting paedophilia, or threatened to perform “citizen’s arrests” on the drag queens performing at them. Clashes between protesters and counter protesters or police broke out at a number of them.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Nadhim Zahawi: pupils may have to wear masks again if Covid cases rise

Education secretary confirms back-up plan for English schools but says he doesn’t…

The NHS is already overstretched – dropping Covid restrictions will spell disaster for patients | Rachel Clarke

For every Covid case we take in, we erode our capacity to…

Sainsbury’s to increase shop workers’ pay to at least £10 an hour

New rates of pay for drivers and store staff exceed legal minimum…