This is a landmark moment for fairness and for female athletes everywhere. SWSA spokeswoman Ro Edge says: “The IOC’s long-overdue reversal is a victory for science and fairness that has been hard-fought by women around the world. For too long, female athletes have been forced to compete against males under the guise of inclusion. This ends now at the Olympic level – and it must end here in New Zealand too.”
The IOC’s earlier policy was based on a single, deeply flawed study that was authored by a trans-identifying male and opened the door for males to enter female categories across global sport. From there, the rot spread downward into federations, community clubs and even school competitions.
In New Zealand, girls have been losing races, trophies and scholarships. They’ve been pushed out of teams, silenced when they object and told that inclusion matters more than fairness or safety.
The damage was real, and it was preventable.
The IOC now admits that these policies are unfair and unsafe. By reversing course, it has not just corrected its own mistake, it has validated everything female athletes and women’s rights advocates have been saying for years.
The same scientific and ethical principles that have driven the IOC’s decision must be applied here in New Zealand. As SWSA has demanded, the Government must fulfil its coalition agreement with New Zealand First and direct all publicly funded sporting bodies to protect the female category.
Sport New Zealand must update its policies immediately to ensure that fairness, safety and opportunity for girls and women are not sacrificed to ideology.
Schools and community sports must be restored to sanity. No girl should have to compete against a boy or share changing facilities with one who “identifies” as female.
Our leaders love to say that sport reflects who we are as a nation. Well, what does it say about us if we allow girls and women to be humiliated, sidelined or injured for the sake of appeasing activists?
Sport New Zealand has become emblematic of how ideology can corrode integrity in leadership. Under CEO Raelene Castle’s tenure, the organisation has resisted clear government direction to align transgender participation policies with scientific reality and fairness for women. Initially, then Sports Minister Chris Bishop asked Sport New Zealand to review and update its guidelines for transgender people competing in community sport, after he received an open letter signed by more than 50 local Olympians and sports representatives saying the current advice was not fair or safe. That review was then handed to Mark Mitchell, who subbed in as Minister for Sport and Recreation in a Cabinet reshuffle. It was at this point that Sport New Zealand was told by the Government to scrap the guidelines altogether.
This isn’t the first time Castle has found herself in a pickle over LGBT issues. While at Rugby Australia, her mishandling of the Israel Folau controversy proved very costly to the organisation. At Sport New Zealand, her tendency to pick virtue-signalling over principles of good governance seems to have taken root at an organisational level and rather than championing fair play and safeguarding the female category, the organisation has entrenched divisive gender dogma and ignored the growing demand from athletes and the public for evidence-based reform.
Raelene Castle. Photo / Mike Scott
But this is a moment of truth. The world’s highest sporting authority has returned to biological reality and fairness. New Zealand must do the same, not next year, not after another “review”, but now.
Every stolen medal, title and scholarship must be returned to its rightful owner. Every time a male competed in a female category, the outcome was illegitimate. Those podiums, records and funding opportunities were won under false pretences and at the expense of girls and women who trained, sacrificed and played by the rules of their sex.
The rectification cannot stop at new policy; it must include restitution. Federations and institutions owe it to the female athletes they failed to acknowledge their victories, restore their records and return the opportunities that were wrongfully taken from them. Anything less would be to leave injustice uncorrected.
As SWSA puts it: “The reversal must start at the top and cascade down once again. The Olympics led the charge into this injustice; it must now lead the way out.”
Fair play is not bigotry. Protecting the female category is not exclusionary. It’s the foundation of women’s sport itself.
The era of denial is over. The science is settled. Now let’s protect women’s sport.
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