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Equality Act 2006

From LGBT History Project
Revision as of 17:39, 21 June 2026 by LGBT-HP (talk | contribs) (added link to legislation)

The Equality Act 2006 set up the Equality and Human Rights Commission to work for the elimination of prejudice on any of the following grounds:

  • age
  • disability
  • sex
  • gender reassignment
  • race
  • religion or belief
  • sexual orientation

As originally drafted, the Act's anti-discrimination provisions covered only religion or belief; the Labour government did not intend to include sexual orientation. Following lobbying by Lord Alli, an openly gay peer, the government agreed to add protection against discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation. This concession came late in the legislative process, too late to be incorporated directly into the primary Act, so the government instead committed to introducing the protection through secondary legislation. This followed in the form of the Equality Act (Sexual

The Act introduced specific new protections against discrimination on the grounds of religion or belief and sexual orientation, extending existing equality law into these areas for the first time.

The provisions of the Act have since been superseded by the Equality Act 2010.

References