After the
1964 United Kingdom general election, which narrowly elected a Labour government, members of both Houses of Parliament became increasingly sympathetic to changing the law. On 26 May 1965,
Leo Abse introduced a
Ten Minute Rule Bill to decriminalise consensual and private sex between men over the age of 21. The House of Commons voted down the proposal on first reading by 178 Noes to 159 Ayes. The small margin of only nineteen was seen as a significant change of opinion in the House of Commons. On 28 October 1965, the House of Lords passed by a vote of 96 to 31 a Bill implementing the Wolfenden Report's recommendations; the draft law, which had been introduced by Conservative Peer
Lord Arran, was supported, among others, by
Archbishop of Canterbury Michael Ramsey and many high-ranking members of the
Church of England. The Bill was subsequently introduced by Conservative MP
Humphry Berkeley in the House of Commons, where it passed its
second reading 164–107 on 11 February 1966. Berkeley had added a provision clarifying that the Bill would not extend to Scotland, convincing some socially conservative Scottish MPs not to vote against. The Bill's consideration was interrupted by the dissolution of Parliament for the
1966 general election, which resulted, among other things, in Berkeley losing his seat; nonetheless, Labour's decisive victory increased the number of MPs who were likely to support decriminalising homosexuality. On 26 April 1966, Lord Arran introduced in the House of Lords the Sexual Offences Bill, which passed on 16 June 1966 by a vote of 78 to 60. Immediately thereafter, Leo Abse, again under the Ten Minute Rule, introduced in the House of Commons the Sexual Offences (No. 2) Bill, a slightly modified version of Lord Arran's Bill. After the Bill was granted a first reading by a vote of 244 to 100, the Government (which is in charge of parliamentary business on all days other than Friday) decided to allot additional parliamentary time to the Bill, since it had become clear there was a majority in favour of it. The decriminalisation of homosexuality was one of multiple
liberal social reforms to be passed under
Wilson's 1966–1970 government and the wider move towards a "
permissive society". These reforms arose due to several separate campaigns benefiting from growing public support and Labour's large majority, rather than from central government leadership. The Sexual Offences (No. 2) Bill ultimately passed in the House of Commons on 4 July by a vote of 99 to 14 (a majority of 85) and in the House of Lords on 13 July by a vote of 111 to 48 (a majority of 63). It received
royal assent on 27 July, becoming the Sexual Offences Act 1967.
House of Commons House of Lords The proposal legalised acts that met the conditions of being between two consenting adults in private. As with the Wolfenden report's proposal, the bill set the
age of consent for homosexual activity to 21, five years higher than for heterosexual activity. It did not delete the offences of
buggery and
gross indecency. Men could still be prosecuted for these offences if their actions did not meet the strict requirements of the bill.
Attitudes towards decriminalisation According to gay activist
Peter Tatchell, dissent against the bill could be summed up by the
Earl of Dudley's 16 June 1966 statement that "[homosexuals] are the most disgusting people in the world ... Prison is much too good a place for them; in fact, that is a place where many of them like to go—for obvious reasons." Even proponents of the bill did not condone homosexuality, but instead argued that it was not within the responsibility of the criminal law to penalise homosexual men, who were already the object of ridicule and derision. Roy Jenkins captured the government's attitude: "those who suffer from this disability carry a great weight of shame all their lives" (quoted during parliamentary debate by
The Times on 4 July 1967). After its passage, Lord Arran said, "I ask those [homosexuals] to show their thanks by comporting themselves quietly and with dignity ... any form of ostentatious behaviour now or in the future or any form of public flaunting would be utterly distasteful ... [And] make the sponsors of this bill regret that they had done what they had done".
Political parties The Bill which would ultimately become the Sexual Offences Act 1967 had twelve sponsors, of which six belonged to the Labour Party (Leo Abse,
Michael Foot,
John Horner,
Charles Pannell,
George Strauss,
Eric Varley), five to the Conservative Party (
Hugh Fraser,
Ian Gilmour,
Peter Rawlinson,
Norman St. John-Stevas and
Richard Wood) and one to the Liberal Party (
Jo Grimond). On all of the Bill's stages, most of the votes in favour of it came from Labour and Liberal MPs, while most votes against it came from Conservative MPs; nonetheless, support for the Bill cut through party ranks, with prominent Conservatives
Margaret Thatcher and
Enoch Powell supporting the Bill during its
first two readings. The coalition in favour of the bill was later described as "a combination of
Gaitskellites and future Thatcherites". ==Legacy==