The Daily Telegraph

PM to promote women in next Cabinet reshuffle

Theresa May wants to correct imbalance that sees females occupy only five of the top 21 jobs

- By Jack Maidment POLITICAL CORRESPOND­ENT

THERESA May is considerin­g promotions for seven female ministers in a reshuffle next month in a bid to improve the gender balance of her Cabinet.

The Prime Minister is contemplat­ing elevating Amber Rudd, the Home Secretary, and Karen Bradley, the Culture Secretary.

Meanwhile, she is also looking at bringing other female ministers into the Cabinet, including Anne Milton, Claire Perry, Sarah Newton, Margot James and Harriett Baldwin. However she is being warned by male Tory MPS that women should be promoted on “absolute merit” rather than on the basis of their gender.

The Prime Minister’s 21-strong Cabinet currently has only five female members.

It comes after allies of David Davis, the Brexit Secretary, revealed their fear that he risks being “marginalis­ed” if Boris Johnson is handed a new “supercharg­ed” Brexit role in a reshuffle.

Mrs May is reportedly considerin­g moving the Foreign Secretary to replace Greg Clark, the Business Secretary, with the portfolio significan­tly bolstered to give Mr Johnson more direct “ownership” of Brexit.

The Prime Minister is likely to be acutely aware of the need to appoint women to top roles to make the Cabinet more representa­tive of society, having helped create the Women2win campaign in 2005 to boost the number of female Conservati­ve MPS.

Any reshuffle is also likely to be seen through the prism of Brexit, with both the Leave and Remain factions within the Conservati­ve Party keen to ensure their voices are heard.

The combinatio­n of those two issues – and the fact that Mrs May heads a minority government propped up by the DUP – means that any reshuffle is likely to be fraught with difficulty.

Mrs May is also facing pressure to elevate to ministeria­l roles Tory MPS elected in 2015 and 2017. Many in the party view elevating new blood as crucial to its hopes of reposition­ing itself, particular­ly in the minds of younger voters.

One long-serving male Tory MP said: “I am sure there will be a push to promote women because Theresa May was in charge of Women2win.

“It is a big thing for her and does mean that people are promoted not necessaril­y on merit, which is a worry. It should be on absolute merit.”

A male Tory MP from the 2017 intake said: “Women are going to get promoted on merit and there are some very capable women in the party.”

The MP added: “There is definitely a pressing case to bring on some of the younger MPS, particular­ly the 2015ers.

“People need junior ministeria­l experience at least.”

‘She is being warned by male Tory MPS that women should be promoted on “absolute merit” not on the basis of their gender’

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