- Source: Women in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom
The representation of women in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom has been an issue in the politics of the United Kingdom at numerous points in the 20th and 21st centuries. Originally debate centred on whether women should be allowed to vote and stand for election as Members of Parliament. The Parliament (Qualification of Women) Act 1918 gave women over 21 the right to stand for election as a Member of Parliament. The United Kingdom has had three female Prime Ministers: Margaret Thatcher (1979–1990), Theresa May (2016–2019), and Liz Truss (2022). The publication of the book Women in the House by Elizabeth Vallance in 1979 highlighted the under-representation of women in Parliament. In more modern times concerns about the under-representation of women led the Labour Party to introduce and, decades later, abandon all-women short lists, something which was later held to breach discrimination laws.
Between 1918 and 2024, a total of 693 women have been elected as Members of the House of Commons. As of July 2024 there are 263 women in the House of Commons, the highest ever. This is an all-time high at 40%. The previous number was 220, set in 2019, which accounted for 35% of members elected or re-elected that year. Additionally, at the 2024 general election the most female Labour MPs were elected or re-elected (190 women in total) – another instance in Labour's history that this has happened, after 119 in 2017. The female member of Parliament with the longest period of continuous service is informally known as the Mother of the House, who is Diane Abbott, following the 2024 election.
Suffrage
In 1832 Henry Hunt became the first MP to raise the issue of women's suffrage in the House of Commons, followed in 1867 by John Stuart Mill. Following this attempts were made to widen the franchise in every Parliament.
Women gained the right to vote with the passing of the Representation of the People Act 1918 after World War I. This gave the vote to women over the age of 30. However, the Speakers Conference which was charged with looking into giving women the vote did not have as its terms of reference, consideration to women standing as candidates for Parliament. However, Sir Herbert Samuel, the former Liberal Home Secretary, moved a separate motion on 23 October 1918 to allow women to be eligible as Members of Parliament. The vote was passed by 274 to 25 and the government rushed through a bill to make it law in time for the 1918 general election. This bill did not specify any age restriction, unlike the voting bill. This later led to a number of incidents of women under the age of 30, who were not allowed to vote, standing for Parliament, notably the 27-year-old Liberal Ursula Williams standing in 1923.
Landmarks and records
= Political firsts for women in House of Commons
=1918: Women able to stand for Parliament.
1918: First woman elected to Parliament (Constance Markievicz). However, as a member of Sinn Féin, she did not take her seat. Markievicz also became the only woman to represent an Irish constituency in Parliament until 1922 and the first female member who, before the election, chose to become a Catholic.
1919: Member of Parliament to take her seat (Nancy Astor) – for Coalition Conservatives
1921: British-born member to take her seat (Margaret Wintringham) – Liberal Party
1923: Disabled woman (Mabel Philipson) – Conservative Party. She had no vision in one eye.
1924: Minister (Margaret Bondfield) – for Labour Party
1926: Member to represent more than one constituency in non-consecutive terms (Margaret Bondfield) – Labour Party
1929: Cabinet minister and privy counsellor (Margaret Bondfield)
1929: Female Baby of the House (Jennie Lee) – Labour Party
1929: Independent member elected (Eleanor Rathbone)
1929: Non-Christian elected (Marion Phillips) – Labour Party
1929: Shortest-serving member (Ruth Dalton) – Labour Party; equalled in 1974 by Margo MacDonald – SNP
1931: Member to cross the floor (Cynthia Mosley) – from Labour to New Party
1931: Member to die in office and oldest woman elected (Ethel Bentham) – Labour Party
1938: Resignation from the House, i.e. appointment to a stewardship (The Duchess of Atholl) – Unionist Party
1943: Wheelchair user (Lady Apsley) – Conservative Party
1948: Chair of Committee of Whole House (Florence Paton) – Labour Party
1948: British-born Catholic (Alice Cullen) – Labour Party
1953: Member from Northern Ireland; first Irishwoman to take her seat (Patricia Ford) – Ulster Unionist Party
1965: Parliamentary Whip (Harriet Slater) – Labour Party
1969: Irish republican non-abstentionist (Bernadette Devlin McAliskey) – Unity
1970: Deputy speaker (Betty Harvie Anderson) – Conservative Party
1974: Youngest woman to leave the House (Bernadette Devlin McAliskey) – Independent Socialist
1975: Leader of the Opposition (Margaret Thatcher)
1976: Member outed as LGBT (Maureen Colquhoun) – Labour Party
1979: Prime Minister (Margaret Thatcher) who led the Conservative Party from 1975 to 1990.
1987: Member from ethnic or racial minorities (Diane Abbott) – Labour Party
1992: Speaker of the House of Commons (Betty Boothroyd) – Labour Party. As of 2024 she remains the only female to hold the office of House Speaker.
1997: Full-time Minister for Women (Joan Ruddock) – Labour Party
1997: Member who came out as LGBT in office (Angela Eagle) – Labour Party
1998: Chief Whip (Ann Taylor) – Labour Party
2010: LGBT member elected (Margot James) – Conservative Party
2010: Minor party members elected (Caroline Lucas – Green Party of England and Wales; Naomi Long – Alliance Party of Northern Ireland)
2015: Youngest woman elected (Mhairi Black) – SNP
2016: Cabinet minister to come out in office (Justine Greening) – Conservative Party
2016: Member to be assassinated (Jo Cox) – Labour Party. She became also the first Labour MP to die as a crime victim.
2017: Oldest woman to be re-elected (Ann Clwyd) - Labour Party
2019: Ethnic minority female holder of a Great Office of State (Priti Patel) – Conservative Party
2019: Non-Christian by choice of conversion elected (Charlotte Nichols), and hijab-wearing member (Apsana Begum) – Labour Party
2019: Oldest woman to leave the House (Ann Clwyd) – Labour Party
2019: Member to be recalled by a successful petition (Fiona Onasanya) – Independent, originally elected as Labour
2022: Youngest, shortest-serving Prime Minister (Liz Truss) and female Deputy Prime Minister (Thérèse Coffey) – Conservative Party
2022: Member to vacate her seat for an actual paid office under the Crown (Rosie Cooper) – Labour Party
2024: Former prime minister to lose re-election (Liz Truss) – Conservative Party
2024: First female Chancellor of the Exchequer (Rachel Reeves) – Labour Party
2024: Ethnic minority deputy speaker (Nus Ghani) – Conservative Party
2024: Ethnic minority leader of the opposition and also her party's youngest female parliamentary leader (Kemi Badenoch) – Conservative Party
= Records
=Margaret Beckett has been the longest serving female MP in the history of the House of Commons. She was an MP for Lincoln from 10 October 1974 until 7 April 1979, and served as MP for Derby South from 9 June 1983 until 30 May 2024.
Harriet Harman has been the longest continuously serving female MP in the history of the House of Commons. She was MP for Peckham from 28 October 1982 until 1 May 1997, and served as MP for Camberwell and Peckham from 1 May 1997 to 30 May 2024. On 13 June 2017 Harman was dubbed "Mother of the House" by Prime Minister Theresa May, in recognition of her status as longest continuously serving woman MP (though she was not the longest serving MP overall, and would therefore not gain any official duties).
= Female MPs with more than 25 years' service
=As of 2024, there are 36 women (out of a total of 693) who have served 25 years or more service in the House of Commons, either continuously or cumulatively.
Current representation
As of July 2024, there are 263 female MPs in the House of Commons.
In February 2018 the Electoral Reform Society reported that hundreds of seats were being effectively 'reserved' by men, holding back women's representation. Their report states that 170 seats have been held by men first elected in 2005 or before – with few opportunities for women to take those seats or selections. Broadly speaking, the longer an MP has been in Parliament, the more likely they are to be male.
= Current female Cabinet members (Labour Party)
=Angela Rayner – Deputy Prime Minister, and Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government
Bridget Phillipson – Secretary of State for Education
Lucy Powell – Leader of the House of Commons, and Lord President of the Council
Lisa Nandy – Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport
Rachel Reeves – Chancellor of the Exchequer
Yvette Cooper – Secretary of State for the Home Department
Shabana Mahmood – Lord Chancellor, and Secretary of State for Justice
The Baroness Smith of Basildon – Leader of the House of Lords, and Lord Privy Seal
Liz Kendall – Secretary of State for Work and Pensions
Louise Haigh – Secretary of State for Transport
Jo Stevens – Secretary of State for Wales
Historic representation
= 2019 election
=In the 2019 general election, 220 women were elected, making up 34% of the House of Commons, up from 208 and 32% before the election.
Female Cabinet members appointed after the 2019 election
Suella Braverman - Attorney General for England and Wales (2020–22)/Secretary of State for the Home Department (2022, 2022–23)
Thérèse Coffey – Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (2019–22)/Health and Social Care & Deputy Prime Minister (2022)/Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (2022–23)
Michelle Donelan – Secretary of State for Education (2022)/Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (2022–23)/Science, Innovation and Technology (2023–24)
Nadine Dorries – Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport
Baroness Evans of Bowes Park – Leader of the House of Lords
Amanda Milling – Minister Without Portfolio
Priti Patel – Secretary of State for the Home Department (2019–22)
Chloe Smith – Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (2022)/Science, Innovation and Technology (2023)
Anne-Marie Trevelyan – Secretary of State for International Development (2020)/International Trade and President of the Board of Trade (2021–22)/Transport (2022)
Liz Truss – Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Developmental Affairs (2021–22)/Prime Minister (2022)
Kemi Badenoch – Secretary of State for International Trade (2022–23)/Business and Trade (2023–24)/President of the Board of Trade
Gillian Keegan – Secretary of State for Education
Penny Mordaunt – Leader of the House of Commons/Lord President of the Council
Lucy Frazer – Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport
Claire Coutinho – Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero (2023–24)
Victoria Atkins – Secretary of State for Health and Social Care (2023–24)
= 2017 election
=In the 2017 general election, 208 women were elected, making up 32% of the House of Commons, up from 191 and 29% before the election.
Female Cabinet members appointed after the 2017 election
Theresa May – Prime Minister
Liz Truss – Secretary of State for International Trade/President of the Board of Trade
Thérèse Coffey – Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (2019)
Baroness Evans of Bowes Park – Leader of the House of Lords
Penny Mordaunt – Secretary of State for Defence
Karen Bradley – Secretary of State for Northern Ireland
Andrea Leadsom – Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy
Priti Patel – Secretary of State for the Home Department
Theresa Villiers – Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
Nicky Morgan – Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport
Esther McVey – Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (2018)
Amber Rudd – Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (2018–19)
= 2015 election
=In the 2015 general election, 191 women were elected, making up 29% of the House of Commons, up from 141 and 23% before the election.
Female Cabinet members appointed after the 2015 election
Theresa May – Secretary of State for the Home Department
Justine Greening – Secretary of State for International Development
Nicky Morgan – Secretary of State for Education and Minister for Women and Equalities
Baroness Stowell of Beeston – Leader of the House of Lords
Theresa Villiers – Secretary of State for Northern Ireland
Liz Truss – Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (2014–16)/Justice (2016–17)
Amber Rudd – Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change
= 2010 election
=As elected in the 2010 general election.
Female Cabinet members appointed after the 2010 election
Theresa May – Secretary of State for the Home Department
Caroline Spelman – Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
Cheryl Gillan – Secretary of State for Wales
Baroness Warsi – Minister without Portfolio
A total of 46 female ministers have held Cabinet positions since the first, Margaret Bondfield, in 1929. Tony Blair's 1997 Cabinet had five women and was the first to include more than two female ministers at one time. The highest number of concurrent women Cabinet ministers under Tony Blair was eight (36 per cent), then a record from May 2006 to May 2007. Other women have attended Cabinet without being full members, including Caroline Flint, Anna Soubry and Caroline Nokes. Some who have attended Cabinet have subsequently, or previously been full Cabinet ministers, including Tessa Jowell, Liz Truss and Andrea Leadsom.
= All-women shortlists
=All-women shortlists are a method of affirmative action which has been used by the Labour Party to increase the representation of women in Parliament. As of 2015, 117 Labour MPs have been elected to the House of Commons after being selected as candidates through an all-women shortlist. In 2002 this method of selection was ruled to breach the Sex Discrimination Act 1975. In response to this ruling the Sex Discrimination (Election Candidates) Act 2002 legalised all-women short lists as a method of selection. The Equality Act 2010 extends this exemption from discrimination law to 2030.
Ahead of the 2024 general election, HuffPost reported in March 2022 that Labour stopped using all-women shortlists, citing legal advice that continuing to use them for choosing parliamentary candidates would become an "unlawful" practice again under the Equality Act.
See also
Blair Babe
Election results of women in United Kingdom general elections (1918–1945)
List of female members of the House of Commons of the United Kingdom
Lists of female political office-holders in the United Kingdom
Timeline of female MPs in the House of Commons
Widow's succession
Women in the House of Lords
European countries by percentage of women in national parliaments
Women in positions of power
Critical mass (gender politics)
Women Political Leaders
Women in government
Women's suffrage in the United Kingdom
Notes
References
Further reading
"Women in the House of Commons inquiry". Women and Equalities Committee. Retrieved 4 October 2017.
"Women in the House of Commons (archived factsheets)". House of Commons Information Office, House of Commons Library. Retrieved 4 October 2017.
Vallance, Elizabeth M. (1979). Women in the House: a study of women Members of Parliament. Athlone Press. ISBN 9780485111866.
All Party Parliamentary Group Women in Parliament (July 2014). "Improving Parliament: Creating a Better and More Representative House" (PDF). House of Commons. Retrieved 21 June 2015.
"Harman's office Thatcher U-turn". BBC News. London: BBC. 16 September 2009. Retrieved 21 June 2015.
"Women in Parliament and Government". House of Commons Library. 25 September 2019.
External links
"Parliament and Women". UK Parliament website.
"Women in the House of Commons". UK Parliament website.
"Women and the House of Lords". UK Parliament website.
"Campaigning for women in the Lords". UK Parliament website.
"Accommodating women peers". UK Parliament website.
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