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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
National
Paul McAuley

Dad told he's 'going to hell' after stranger stopped him as he shopped

A dad was told he was "living in sin" by a stranger in the street as he shopped with his partner.

Jason Walsh, a Green Party councillor for Bebington, was stopped twice in one day by people who recognised him from his work in the local area. The 35-year-old and his partner firstly were told how they would both be “sent to hell” because of their homosexuality.

Cllr Walsh, a bank manager, told the ECHO : “In my early 20s, I had a few derogatory words said about me on the streets and I had a waiter ask me to stop holding hands with my partner in a restaurant as we were supposedly upsetting the other guests - which just wasn’t true.

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“But then for about 10 years, nothing actually happened until this year. I had someone message me with one of my leaflets and they had written homophobic language on it and I needed to decide how to deal with that, so I reported it as a hate crime. But you shouldn’t have a tolerance for how much abuse you get.

"Around the same time as the hate letter, I had someone come up to me when I was with my partner as they had recognised me as a local councillor. The resident’s friend had said how we were living in sin and gave us the rhetoric around Christianity and how what we were doing was going to send us to hell.”

Cllr Walsh claims he acknowledged the person’s religious beliefs but emphasised they would not “dictate” how he would choose to live his life. Thankfully, Cllr Walsh’s day took a turn for the better when an hour later he had another encounter with someone else who recognised him from his work.

He said: “People don’t often stop you on the street but on the same shopping trip, someone saw me and just said ‘Hi Jason, you’re doing a great job, keep it up’, it was just a bit of good karma. I usually don’t get either, but I received both in the same hour, and at least it ended on a high.

Green Party councillor for Bebington Jason Walsh (Jason Walsh)

Cllr Walsh explained how he understands when going door-knocking in his local area, he is “inviting” criticism, but pointed out how it is one thing to attack a political party and another to attack politicians on a personal level.

He added: “I get plenty of people being unpleasant to me full stop. People sometimes forgot that others who put themselves out there to be politicians are genuinely in it for the right reasons. So it shouldn’t be ok to abuse someone just because they are a politician and they are black or they are gay.”

Having always wanted a family, the father-of-one, who had his daughter whilst in a heterosexual relationship, feared she would experience similar homophobia because of having a gay dad. However, this wouldn’t be the case.

Cllr Walsh said: “My daughter was born when I was 21. We just showed her that a normal family was a normal family no matter what the dynamic was. A family is a family. I was worried about my daughter growing up and getting bullied at school but society is now a lot more open and with the younger generations literally, nobody cares (about it) anymore.”

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