The House

A NUMBERS GAME

Does Boris Johnson really have a woman problem? It appears no Prime Minister has ever covered themselves in glory when it comes to appointing women to the cabinet. Kate Proctor crunches the numbers

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Where are the women in cabinet

Like every Prime Minister before him, Boris Johnson has a woman problem when it comes to his cabinet. Diversity was not at its healthiest prior to his arrival, but since becoming Prime Minister in 2019 he’s reduced the number of women from seven to ve.

e A orney General, Suella Braverman, was not classed as a full member but a ended meetings, and has been replaced by Michael Ellis while she is on maternity leave. Her presence meant that on occasion, six women were sat round the table. She has been given a curiously titled position: minister on leave, created especially so she can keep her government job while having a baby.

In the micro-reshu e, justice minister Lucy Frazer has been promoted to Solicitor General – so there is another woman in a senior post – but by convention she won’t a end cabinet. In fact the latest arrival around the top table is Lord David Frost, now minister for state for the Cabinet O ce, adding another man to the 17-strong team of males occupying the highest o ces in government. Former cabinet member, Anne-Marie Trevelyan, was secretary of state for internatio­nal developmen­t but was axed last year when the department moved to the Foreign O ce. She is now a minister.

A former minister said part of Johnson’s di culty around the lack of women is that he only wants to appoint loyalists and those who voted for him.

“e last reshu e was de nitely a step backwards in terms of women in cabinet,” they said.

“ere should be some pressure to appoint more women this time round but I’m not sure that will change. He’s been remarkably consistent in that almost nobody who didn’t vote for him is given a place in government.

“at is one of the reasons why he hasn’t got so many women in cabinet now and this probably won’t change. He has a group who back him strongly, and they are mainly men.” Strong advocates like Priti Patel, and party chair Amanda Milling are already in the cabinet.

But this lack of women is far from an exclusivel­y Johnsonian issue. e

“He has a group who back him strongly, and they are mainly men”

maximum number of women who have ever a ended cabinet at the same time is eight, in a brief period between 2006 and 2007 under the third government of Tony Blair. eresa May started out as Prime Minister with the same gure, but that included her own position. Aside from the obvious achievemen­t of Conservati­ve women Margaret atcher and May becoming the rst and second female prime ministers, when it comes to women in cabinet, no political leader has made anything close to truly representa­tive strides.

Remarkably, only 46 women have ever been appointed to cabinet since 1929. e sixth woman to become a secretary of state was Margaret atcher, who was education secretary in Edward Heath’s 1970 to 1974 ministry. When it was her turn to lead however, she swi ly kicked away the ladder behind her, appointing only one woman to cabinet in her entire time as prime minister – Baroness Young, who was leader of the Lords for two years in the early 1980s. Her successor John Major carried on atcher’s disregard for women with his rst ministry being entirely woman-free. In 1992 he appointed Virginia Bo omley to health and Gillian Shephard to employment. However, there weren’t huge numbers to choose from. In a een-year period between 1983 and 1997, there were only 17 Conservati­ve female MPs.

Despite the headlines of “Blair’s babes” and the huge increase in female MPs in 1997, Tony Blair appointed just ve women to cabinet. David Cameron began his Coalition government with four women too, and Liberal Democrat leader and deputy prime minister at the time, Nick Clegg, was allocated four positions, but none of those went to the party’s female MPs.

By the time Cameron le government in 2016, female cabinet members had only risen to seven – around 30 per cent of the 22 positions. One way various prime ministers have tried to argue that they’re including women in decision-making is by creating a series of posts where they can a end cabinet as junior ministers.

One former woman minister who went to meetings due to her brief said that under May everyone was treated equally and that she was given the same respect as a full-time member.

“I never felt like I was there on su erance, just to make up the numbers of women,” she said.

eresa Villiers, one of the most senior Conservati­ve women from the past decade, who served as Northern Ireland Secretary between 2012 and 2016 and as secretary of state for Defra between 2018 and 2019, said: “Being a woman in politics comes with pluses and minuses. ere are times when gender is an advantage. In some instances, particular­ly at the start of their careers, women MPs can get noticed, and get considered for certain things to a greater degree than their male contempora­ries.

“But women in political o ce do tend to a ract more hostile comment and brie ng than their male competitor­s. It can work both ways.”

A former government special adviser said there have been occasions when they think men have been treated di erently regarding their career trajectori­es. ey listed the example of the appointmen­t of Gavin Williamson to defence secretary from his position as chief whip, having never even served as a junior minister beforehand. ey didn’t think a woman would have ever been parachuted into a similar position.

ey said they’ve also seen some “inane” reshu es where women are moved continuous­ly from one ministeria­l post to the next. Caroline Dinenage, for example, has been digital minister, social care minister and a junior minister for family support and housing and women equalities and early years. Yet she still hasn’t been promoted to a full cabinet post.

With an anticipate­d early 2021 reshu e now expected to be pushed back to the summer or late autumn, there are months of speculatio­n ahead on whether more women will be promoted to secretarie­s of state, and who exactly they will be.

It’s an incredibly low bar, but can Johnson be the record-breaking prime minister to push past the cap of eight, and get nine women round the cabinet table?

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