By Caroline Downey
Thursday, October 02, 2025
When it comes to her toxic treatment of J. K. Rowling in
the trans debate, Harry Potter star Emma Watson thinks she can have her
cake and eat it, too. She thinks she can publicly gesture for goodwill after
years of jabbing at the author to whom she owes her career.
As with the twisted activist argument that a gender
transition marks the death of one person and the birth of a new one, Watson has
suggested that the inspirational author she once knew and worked with ceased to
exist somewhere around 2020 — and was replaced by an unrecognizable TERF
(“trans-exclusionary radical feminist”).
Appearing recently on the Jay Shetty Podcast,
Watson, in carefully crafted, PR-conscious terms, said she can still “love” Rowling and be “grateful” to her. She
continued: “I just don’t know what else to do other than hold these two
seemingly incompatible things together at the same time and just hope that one
day maybe they will resolve or like cojoin themselves or maybe accept that they
never will, but that they can both still be true.”
Even if Watson thought she was extending an olive branch,
the implication is that the current Rowling is a stranger now, all because
Rowling has stayed true to what women’s rights really mean.
It would be one thing if Watson said, “I disagree with
Rowling on the trans issue, but I deeply love and respect her as an
intellectual and person.” Instead, her comments conveyed the message that she
has a faint and fond memory of a good person who no longer exists.
So it’s no surprise that Rowling reacted negatively. As
the author theorized in her scathing response to Watson on X, her PR team probably urged her to ease off on
the defiant leftism because the zeitgeist has changed. Slowly but inexorably,
both the U.S. and the U.K. are waking up to the trans insanity. Watson
evidently assumed that Rowling would welcome a détente. Hogwash, Rowling
retorted.
In the podcast interview, Watson acted as though she has
been the peacekeeper all along, not at all interested in escalation but only in
love and magnanimity. This is the same actress who once threw a sly, nasty jab
at Rowling. As the presenter of the British Academy Film Awards in 2022, Watson
opened the ceremony by saying, “I’m
here for all of the witches.” After a slight pause, she smiled and
mouthed, “Barring one,” to the hoots and merriment of the audience.
Perhaps what’s most insulting about Watson’s portrayal of
Rowling is that Rowling has been a consistent feminist her entire professional
life. When transgenderism emerged, she logically applied her embrace of women’s
rights — no doubt informed by her experience as a young mother with an abusive
husband — to women’s spaces that faced invasion by men claiming to be women.
Rowling notes the simple fact that womanhood is not an act, a part to play, or
a costume, but an immutable biological reality, and she further notes that
women must be protected from male predation, even if it’s disguised as the
so-called marginalized trying to claim equal opportunity.
During another part of the interview, Watson broke down
as she told Shetty how cold and cutthroat Hollywood was to her after she left
the Harry Potter cocoon, where she started as a child and made
friendships over a decade. It’s fair to feel this way, but the coddled,
protected environment that Watson enjoyed on the set of Harry Potter was
made possible only by Rowling. You’d think Watson would be grateful, instead of
mealymouthed, toward Rowling for creating this safe space.
Contrast Watson’s behavior with that of Tom Felton, who
played antagonist Draco Malfoy in the movies. Asked by a reporter at the June
Tony Awards whether Rowling’s position on the trans issue affects his work,
Felton replied, “I can’t say it does. I’m not really that attuned
to it. The only thing I always remind myself is that I’ve been lucky enough to
travel the world, here I am in New York. I have not seen anything bring the
world together more than Potter. She’s responsible for that, so I’m incredibly
grateful.”
This is the proper attitude toward the visionary who gave
you your big break. Watson is entitled to her free expression, as Rowling
points out. But it’s another thing entirely to expect forgiveness from someone
who has faced a barrage of death, rape, and torture threats — for having taken
a stand in one of the most combustible cultural debates of our time. Watson can
say what she likes, but then she must accept the consequences of what she’s
said.
As Rowling put it: “Adults can’t expect to cozy up to an
activist movement that regularly calls for a friend’s assassination, then
assert their right to the former friend’s love, as though the friend was in
fact their mother. Emma is rightly free to disagree with me and indeed to
discuss her feelings about me in public — but I have the same right, and I’ve
finally decided to exercise it.”
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