In addition to electing an historic number — 101 — of women
MPs, Labour succeeded in closing the gender gap in voting in this general
election. In 1992 exit polls showed that only 35 per cent of women voted
Labour. This compared with 37 per cent of men.
The increased number of women MPs still leaves the Parliamentary Labour
Party made up of only 24 per cent women members and the House of Commons
as a whole with 18 per cent of MPs being women, lower than parliaments
in Spain, Germany, Austria, Holland, Denmark and Sweden. At least 33
of the new women MPs elected were originally selected through an all-women
shortlist. However, following the failure to appeal the Leeds Industrial
Tribunal ruling, this policy was dropped and has not been replaced with
any other mechanism.
In addition, a large number of the new women Labour MPs were elected in seats which experienced some of the biggest swings from the Tories. These included Basildon, Blackpool North, Castle Point, Romford, Swindon South, and several others, where there were swings of more than 14 per cent. That is, much higher than the average swing, in England, of 10 per cent. So some of the women elected are in the most vulnerable seats, and with women-only shortlists gone there is no longer any mechanism to force up the number of women candidates.
Tony Blair’s policies are going to hit women particularly hard.
This is the meaning of a low national minimum wage with women constituting
the bulk of low paid workers, Frank Field’s ‘radical reform’ of
the welfare state threatening to deny single mothers unemployment benefits
when their youngest child reaches four and attacks on the state pension.
Women live longer on average than men to find their pension entitlements
undermined by low pay in their working lives and interruptions to care
for children: millions of women will be unable to afford the private
pensions advocated by Field.
One of the newly elected 101, Patricia Hewitt, called for the extension
of Labour’s ‘welfare to work’ policies to ‘lone
mothers, partners of unemployed men and those on family credit...[who]
live off benefit’, adding ‘why shouldn’t Welfare to
Work embrace anyone now on welfare who is able to work?’ (Guardian 13 May).
Such policies promise a nightmare for millions of women. This will provoke
a reaction from women in society, in the unions and Labour Party, and
even in the PLP. But the Labour right has steadily attacked the self-organisation
of women in the party’s ranks, making the women’s conference
biennial, and organising ‘training’ events instead. The Labour
into Power proposes to abolish the women’s section of the NEC.
But women are not an insignificant social force — as Labour’s
defeats in every election from 1979 through 1992 forced it to understand — they
are the majority of society. Opposition to attacks on women’s wages,
welfare rights and social position will inevitably find political expression.