The High Court ruled that the Office for Students (OFS) acted unlawfully by fining the University of Sussex £585,000 for its trans equality policy, which the court found was not a governing document but an equality policy that the OFS misinterpreted in isolation rather than reading it alongside the university's wider free speech protections; this case illustrates that while universities must defend lawful academic speech, regulators must act lawfully and fairly without predetermination, and the court's judgment did not determine whether Sussex treated Stock well but rather whether the regulator's punishment was legally justified.
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Deep Dive
Kathleen Stock and Sussex universityAdded:
This is quite a complicated case and I want to separate three things.
Kathleen Stock's departure, the OFS penalty, and the High Court ruling.
And the key point is that the court did not decide whether Sussex, the University of Sussex, treated Stock well. It judged whether the regulator acted lawfully. So, there are, as ever, three points. Firstly, Kathleen Stock's case was real and serious. Kathleen Stock was a philosophy professor at Sussex University.
She held gender gender-critical views, meaning she argued that biological sex matters in law and policy and that gender identity should not override sex in every context. In 2021, protests against her intensified and the High Court judgment records abusive comments, complaints, canceled events, a serious threatening image, and protests calling for her employment to end. Stock resigned on the 28th of October 2021, saying the experience had left her isolated and distressed.
The university later expressed regret over her departure, but this court case was not a trial of what happened to her.
Mrs. Justice Lieven explicitly said the judicial review was not a fact-finding exercise about Stock's departure. It was about whether the Office for Students acted lawfully when it fined Sussex.
Secondly, the OFS overreached. The OFS fined Sussex 585,000 pounds in March 2025. Its argument was that Sussex's trans and non-binary equality policy chilled lawful speech.
The policy had included phrases such as positively represent trans people and warnings against transphobic propaganda.
The OFS said this risked making staff and students self-censor, especially those with gender-critical views. Sussex argued that this policy was not a governing document.
And in plain English, it was not part of the university's constitutional machinery.
It was an equality policy. The judge agreed that matters because the OFS had treated it as if it fell within a specific regulatory condition. The court said the OFS misunderstood the law and therefore exceeded its powers. The judge also said the OFS misread the policy. It looked at parts of it in isolation rather than reading it alongside the university's wider free speech protections. The court found that the OFS failed to read the policy statement as a whole.
Thirdly and finally, the real scandal is that both sides have a point, but neither side gets a clean victory.
Supporters of Stock are right about one thing.
Universities should not allow activists, staff, or students to make lawful academic speech impossible. If an academic is shouted down, threatened, isolated, or driven out because of lawful views, that is a failure of academic culture. Sussex's moral record over Stock still looks deeply troubling.
But Sussex is also right about one thing. A regulator must act lawfully, fairly, and without predetermination.
Mrs. Justice Lieven said that the OFS had approached the matter with a closed mind and that the final decision was vitiated by bias. That is devastating language. The OFS seemed to want a test case. It It seemed to want to send a signal to the university sector, and that is understandable politically, but dangerous legally. Regulators are not campaign groups. They must not decide the answer first and build the process afterwards. And this is why the ruling is controversial. Free speech campaigners see it as a blow to academic freedom. They fear universities will treat it as permission to hide behind procedural complexity while controversial scholars remain vulnerable.
Universities see it differently. They see a regulator punished for legal overreach, poor process, and a crude approach to difficult equality policies.
The truth is, of course, sharper. The court did not say Sussex behaved well over Kathleen Stock. It said the OFS punished Sussex badly. That distinction is everything. The judgment leaves us with a hard lesson. A university must defend lawful speech, including speech many students dislike. A regulator must defend free speech through lawful process. In this case, Sussex failed morally in the eyes of many observers, but the OFS failed legally in the eyes of the court.
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