Fawcett Society calls for action to make women’s voices heard in devolution.
a pending White Paper. New data from Fawcett shows that:
- Women make up just 21% of all members of the boards of Combined Authorities;
- Only one of the 95 members of these groups is a woman of colour;
- Some boards have as few as 1 in 10 female members;
- Not one of the eight ‘Metro Mayors’ are women.
The new report, ‘Including Women’s Voices’, is the result of two years spent working with women in Greater Manchester and the West Midlands to put gender onto the devolution agenda. It calls
for changes to get more women around the top table, while also highlighting the need to get the voices of ordinary women heard in policymaking. The report calls for each Metro Mayor to create
a permanent, resourced, and diverse Women’s Commission that can engage the grassroots and scrutinise policy decisions.
Gemma Rosenblatt, Fawcett Society Head of Policy and Campaigns, said: “Devolution is looking like old politics not new – with power in the hands of men. All eight ‘Metro Mayors’ are men. And men make up four-fifths of those at the top table. Devolution still presents an opportunity – but only if big changes are made to bring women in. If devolution fails to engage with half the population, it risks the success of the whole project.”
Fawcett’s report calls for:
- More to be done now to get women round the top table – councils should introduce opposite-gender assistant cabinet members so that more women are involved in key discussions – as has been done in Greater Manchester
- Government to change Combined Authority constitutions to require that they are gender equal Metro Mayors to create a diverse and sustainable Women’s Commission in each area to
scrutinise policy - Metro Mayors to use data to understand how policy affects women, including publishing high quality Equality Impact Assessments for policy decisions.
Download ‘Including Women’s Voices’. Find out more about the project