Shadow Minister for Women and Equalities explained

Post:Shadow Minister for Women and Equalities
Incumbent:Mims Davies
Incumbentsince:8 July 2024
Department:Shadow Cabinet
Appointer:Leader of the Opposition
Formation:31 October 1983
First:Jo Richardson
Website:Shadow Cabinet

The shadow minister for women and equalities (previously shadow minister for women, shadow minister for women and equality, shadow secretary of state for women and equalities) is a position in the United Kingdom's Official Opposition, and sits in the Shadow Cabinet. The shadow minister is responsible for holding the minister for women and equalities, responsible for the Government Equalities Office, to account and is responsible for Opposition policy on women's and equality issues.

The post was upgraded to the Shadow Cabinet rank of shadow secretary of state following the snap general election of 2017, with Jeremy Corbyn indicating that if Labour win office at the next election, Women and Equalities will be upgraded to the full status of a government department. Keir Starmer continued this pledge but ultimately continued with a Minister for Women and Equalities when he entered government in July 2024. Previously, the post was often held together with a Shadow Cabinet post, but sometimes as a Shadow Cabinet post in its own right.

The position, since its creation in 1983, has always been held by a female member of parliament. The position has been held by Mims Davies of the Conservative Party since 8 July 2024.

Shadow ministers

Shadow MinisterTook officeLeft officePartyShadow Cabinet
Jo Richardson31 October 1983[1] 18 July 1992LabourKinnock
Mo Mowlam18 July 1992[2] 21 October 1993Smith
Clare Short21 October 1993[3] --accessdate=2 June 2011-->19 October 1995
Blair
Tessa Jowell19 October 1995[4] 26 July 1996
Janet Anderson26 July 19962 May 1997
Gillian Shephard2 May 1997UnknownConservativeMajor
UnclearHague
Theresa May15 June 199914 September 2001
Caroline Spelman14 September 200115 March 2004Duncan Smith
Howard
Eleanor Laing15 March 20042 July 2007
Cameron
Theresa May2 July 200711 May 2010
Yvette Cooper20 May 20107 October 2013LabourHarman I
Miliband
Gloria De Piero7 October 201314 September 2015
Harman II
Kate Green14 September 201527 June 2016Corbyn
Angela Rayner27 June 20166 October 2016
Sarah Champion[5] 6 October 201616 August 2017
Dawn Butler31 August 20176 April 2020
Marsha de Cordova6 April 202014 September 2021Starmer
Anneliese Dodds21 September 20214 July 2024
Mims Davies8 July 2024IncumbentConservativeSunak

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Protest by Nationalists as Dewar takes over . 1 November 1983 . The Glasgow Herald . Geoffrey . Parkhouse . 7.
  2. Web site: Timmins . Nicholas . Smith revamps Shadow Cabinet: Nicholas Timmins analyses the Labour line-up and looks at the backgrounds of the newcomers . . 25 July 1992 . 2 June 2011.
  3. News: Lynton . Martin . Women's lists 'not illegal': The New Shadow Cabinet . . 22 October 1993. <
  4. Web site: Blair turns tables in front bench 'clearout' . 20 October 1995 . The Independent . Davies . Patricia Wynn . Donald Macintyre . Donald Macintyre (journalist) . 14 November 2013.
  5. Web site: Sarah Champion takes Angela Rayner's second brief - women and equalities. . Jessica Elgot, Twitter . 6 October 2016 . 6 October 2016.