Grazia (UK)

Theresa May: ‘It’s really important women see politics as something they can do’

-

EVEN THERESA MAY looked bemused as she was given the rock star treatment at an event last week. The atmosphere fizzed as the Prime Minister crossed the room, the crowd of women surging forward, keen to shake her hand. And when she spoke, there were whoops and cheers. ‘ There is quite a buzz,’ she said to Grazia, grinning.

May had invited more than 100 female politician­s from around the world to Downing Street to mark 100 years of women getting the vote. Later this month sees the centenary anniversar­y of women being allowed to stand for Parliament – and a year from now will mark the 100th anniversar­y of Nancy Astor becoming the first woman to take her seat in the House of Commons.

‘I knew from a young age that I wanted to go into politics, but that wasn’t because of one single person,’ the PM told us. ‘I’ve never been somebody who has had role models, as such. Although, having said that, I think it’s important for women in politics not just to set an example, but also encourage other women to come into politics.’

When May was first elected in 1997, she was one of only 13 other female MPS in her party. Today, there are 67 – and 32% in the Commons overall, the highest number in history – but that’s still nowhere near the number there should be, considerin­g women make up more than half of the population.

May agrees that last week’s results in the US midterm elections – which will result in more women in Congress than ever before – could be a huge boost. ‘It’s always fantastic to see more women being elected into office from any party and from any background.’

But she acknowledg­es that abuse on social media puts many women off standing for Parliament. ‘I am hugely conscious that a lot of MPS have suffered online, and at the last election we saw an awful lot of abuse of candidates on social media,’ she says. ‘[It] can be used to create a positive atmosphere, but it can also create a negative, sometimes vicious, atmosphere and, yes, this is a problem.’

May co-founded the Women2win group in 2005 to support women who want to enter Parliament. ‘I think it’s 

really important that women see politics as something they can do. I hope that with groups like this, and by going to talk to girls in schools, people will just see, just feel, that they can do these sorts of jobs. That women can get into politics, that they can be themselves and they can do a good job.’

May believes the reason people go into politics is to make a difference. ‘It’s why I went into it.’ She recalls one moment she is particular­ly proud of: ‘ There was one instance when I was Home Secretary when, out of the blue, I received a letter from a woman who had been the victim of child abuse. She’d come home one day and her other half said to her, “You should listen to this statement about child sexual abuse from the Home Secretary.” She listened and, as a result of that, she went to the police and reported what had happened to her in the past. And they also identified someone else who’d been a victim of this perpetrato­r.’

The perpetrato­r, says May, is now in jail. ‘And, for that woman, something that had been hanging over her for her whole life – I don’t think there can ever be complete closure because, for a survivor, what they’ve been through is with them all the time – but there was some degree of closure because the perpetrato­r had been brought to justice.’

Back at the event, Elvira Surabaldie­va, an MP in Kyrgyzstan – a country where forced marriage among children is rife – tells Grazia she is a huge fan of May. ‘She’s so fantastic, so inspiring. My one regret is that I didn’t see her shoes! Every MP has to be a role model. I want a woman standing in her kitchen to see a woman MP on the TV and think, “If she can do this, so can I.”’

As for May, there is one woman she singles out as being the most important of the last century. ‘ Without a doubt, Her Majesty the Queen who, through her many years of dedicated service, has been a force of unity and of strength.’

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom