Fair observation, Luton. In hindsight, I probably should have led with the everyday issues that affect far more people: the economy, the cost of living, improving public services, and tackling knife crime. I love sport and I care about ensuring competition is fair and safe, but I accept that I can sometimes devote more attention to that issue than its overall importance might justify.
The trans debate probably does pale in comparison to those bigger challenges, and it undoubtedly gets amplified by the more extreme voices on both sides. That said, I still think it's an area where Labour has unnecessarily tied itself in knots over the past five to ten years. To me, it feels like there was an opportunity to occupy a sensible middle ground: treating trans people with dignity and respect while also acknowledging legitimate concerns around fairness, safeguarding, and women's spaces.
Instead, Labour often seemed reluctant to articulate that balance clearly, which has allowed the Conservatives to appear like the more pragmatic voice on some culture-war issues. That's not a sentence I ever expected to write, but politics can be strange like that