Ministers were answering questions on Women and Equalities.
Subjects covered included... STEM Careers Protected
Characteristics: Caste Gender Pay Gap: Action Plans
Leaving the EU: Effect on Women Freelance Workers:
Shared Parental Leave Business: Representation of Women
Domestic Abuse: Health Priorities Gender
Recognition...Request free trial
Ministers were answering questions on Women and Equalities.
Subjects covered included...
To see any of these in greater detail, click on the links or read
below.
STEM Careers
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1. What steps the Government are taking to
encourage more women to take up STEM
careers. [905376]
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I call the Minister for Women and Equalities, on her
debut at the Dispatch Box in this capacity I think:
.
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Thank you, Mr Speaker. I am delighted to be here in my
new role as Minister for Women and Equalities on
International Day against Homophobia, Transphobia and
Biphobia, and I hope all Members of this House will
show their support to that cause today.
The Government have committed in our careers strategy
to improving information and guidance on STEM careers.
We are also raising awareness of the range of careers
that STEM qualifications offer.
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I welcome the Minister to her new responsibilities and
thank her for her commitment to women studying science
and maths.
In Britain the percentage of women doing engineering is
the worst in Europe: fewer than one in five of those
studying physics A-level are female. I am going
straight from here to the Institute of Physics. Will
the Minister back up the Government’s words with
action: break the deadlock and support prizes and
grants for girls studying physics?
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I will certainly do that. My hon. Friend can take that
message very strongly to the meeting she is about to
attend, and I thank her for the work she is doing to
promote these careers and qualifications to girls. We
fund the Stimulating Physics Network, which provides
schools with the means to improve progression to
physics A-level. The network provides activities
specifically to increase the proportion of girls taking
physics A-level.
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Of all Ministers, this Minister will be the one who
understands the opportunities for girls, particularly
those following STEM subjects, in joining the armed
forces. The RAF presentation team is coming to my
constituency, and I have particularly focused on asking
primary schools if they would like to see the
opportunity that STEM subjects offer for careers in our
armed forces: does she agree?
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I agree so much that I signed up myself. I pay tribute
to the armed forces for the work they have done in
recent years, in particular the RAF, some of whose
initiatives have been pioneering. I would like to see
more women serving in our armed forces; our armed
forces will be operationally better if that is the
case.
Protected Characteristics: Caste
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2. When the Government plan to respond to the
consultation on caste as a protected characteristic in
the Equality Act 2010. [905377]
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Our public consultation on how best to ensure that
there is appropriate and proportionate legal protection
against caste discrimination ran for six months last
year. We received more than 16,000 responses, which
demonstrates how important this matter is to some
groups and communities, and we will respond in due
course.
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I welcome my right hon. Friend to her post. She is the
third Minister for Women and Equalities since the
consultation closed, and I have no doubt that she is
going to wade through those 16,000 responses, which
will overwhelmingly be in favour of caste being removed
as a protected characteristic. Will she agree to meet
me so that I can brief her on the feelings of the
community on this matter?
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I understand my hon. Friend’s frustration. He has
really championed this issue for a long time. I have
already agreed to meet him, and I am very happy to do
so, but I can reassure him that previous holders of
this post have already briefed me and that this matter
is receiving my immediate attention.
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The Minister will be aware that the Enterprise and
Regulatory Reform Act 2013 requires the Government to
amend the Equality Act 2010 to provide for caste as an
aspect of race discrimination, and that case law will
not be sufficient to do that. In addition to meeting
those who advocate removing caste altogether from the
legislation, will she also meet the all-party
parliamentary group for Dalits, so that we can explain
why the will of Parliament must be followed?
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I will be happy to do that, and I would like to do it
swiftly. I want to ensure that we take absolutely the
right decision. The responses to the consultation were
heavily weighted towards one outcome, but I want to
know the case law and all the arguments before we take
any decision.
Gender Pay Gap: Action Plans
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3. What steps the Government are taking to ensure
that companies publish action plans to reduce their
gender pay gaps. [905378]
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I am delighted that 10,212 employers have now reported
their gender pay gap, as of 9 o’clock this morning.
That is 95% of eligible employers. Of course, reporting
is just the first step, and it is important that
employers now take action to close the gender pay gap
in their businesses and organisations. Many have
already published action plans, and we are working to
support employers to take action to close those gaps.
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Of course, had the coalition implemented Labour’s
ground-breaking 2010 Equality Act fully, we would be
much further down the road towards gender pay equality
today. It is all very well publishing the data, but
when is the Minister going to show some grit and insist
that companies produce action plans, so that we can
make some real progress?
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The hon. Gentleman does the Government a disservice, if
I may say so. This is world-leading legislation, and I
have always been careful to ensure that we share the
credit for it with the right hon. and learned Member
for Camberwell and Peckham (Ms Harman), who brought the
Act into being. We are ambitious about this, but we
want to bring business with us. This is about cultural
change, and there are really good signs that businesses
are now listening to the public’s will that women must
be paid fairly and properly.
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The new Minister for Women and Equalities made an
announcement that was welcomed by the Labour party when
she said that sectors under the Government’s remit
would lay out plans for organisations to publish their
gender pay gap audits. It is good to see that that is
one of her first actions, but does it go far enough?
Can we be a little bit more ambitious? Will the
Government commit to taking the next step, just as the
Labour party is proposing, and introduce mandatory
regulation so that next year all companies will have to
report action plans alongside their gender pay gap
figures or face fines and further auditing?
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I am grateful to the hon. Lady for her question. We are
reviewing the evidence carefully. We know, for example,
that more than 10,000 businesses have been having a
conversation about their pay policy in a way that they
simply were not doing a year ago. We will review the
evidence carefully and see what more needs to be done
to ensure that businesses are working in accordance
with the public will to ensure that these gaps are
closed.
Leaving the EU: Effect on Women
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4. What discussions she has had with Cabinet
colleagues on the effect of the UK leaving the EU on
women. [905379]
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I have regular meetings and discussions with
ministerial colleagues about the UK’s exit from the
European Union. As we leave the EU, we are committed to
retaining the rights of workers and all the protections
of the Equality Acts of 2006 and 2010, including those
that particularly benefit women.
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Is the Minister aware of how much EU funding
specifically focuses on women and addresses the causes
of gender inequality? Will she give assurances to the
women of Wales and the rest of the UK that they will
not pay a higher price when, or should, Brexit spark a
downturn in the economy?
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I can give them that assurance. Protections will still
exist in our law, and we will have a dividend from
leaving the EU, so we can choose what to spend that
money on. It is wrong to scare people with the
suggestion that equalities will somehow be watered
down.
Freelance Workers: Shared Parental Leave
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5. If she will discuss with Cabinet colleagues the
potential benefits for women of bringing forward
legislative proposals to introduce shared parental
leave for freelance workers. [905380]
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The hon. Gentleman has raised this issue with me in the
House before with his usual tenacity and clarity.
Family leave and pay entitlements focus on supporting
employed parents, because they do not generally have as
much flexibility or autonomy in taking time off.
However, we are not ruling out further support for
self-employed parents, but that must be considered
carefully in the wider context of tax, benefits and
rights over the long term.
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I want the Minister not just to rule it out; I want him
to become a champion inside the Government along with
his Women and Equalities colleagues. Shared parental
leave for freelance workers would be one of the best
ways to help women in the workforce to continue
pursuing their careers. I ask the Minister to go away
and think about that and to become a champion, rather
than just someone who does not rule it out.
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I certainly understand the hon. Gentleman’s impatience,
but progress is being made. He will know that a
self-employed mother who wants to return to work
without using her full maternity allowance entitlement
can now convert that into 37 weeks of shared parental
leave and pay for the employed father or partner. The
hon. Gentleman can rest assured that we are considering
the matter with great interest, and I will try to
update him as soon as possible.
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Given my hon. Friend’s personal interest in this
matter, will he join me in supporting the Government’s
“Share the joy” campaign to encourage greater take-up
of shared parental leave?
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I thank my hon. Friend. I assure him that Alice’s
arrival into the world has certainly given me a greater
understanding of the joy that comes from parenthood.
The “Share the joy” campaign is a Government initiative
to promote the benefits of shared parental leave,
because we want more parents to enjoy that time with
their newborn baby. My hon. Friend can rest assured
that we will continue to promote shared parental leave
to get more parents to enjoy it.
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I very much hope that the Minister will have today’s
Official Report framed and hung up in Alice’s room.
Business: Representation of Women
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6. What steps the Government are taking to help
ensure that women are better represented at the highest
levels of business. [905381]
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Diversity is good for business. Organisations with the
highest level of gender diversity in their leadership
teams are 15% more likely to outperform their industry
rivals. There are now no all-male boards in the FTSE
100, compared with 21 such boards in 2011, and the
percentage of women on FTSE 350 boards has more than
doubled since 2010. However, we know that there is more
to do, which is why we commissioned the
Hampton-Alexander review to improve female
representation at the most senior levels in business.
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Clearly, progress is being made, but in thanking my
hon. Friend for her answer, may I ask how the
Government are engaging positively with our business
community to help meet the important Hampton-Alexander
goals?
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I thank my hon. Friend, who has taken a long interest
in diversity matters. Indeed, he is meeting the
Under-Secretary of State for Business, Energy and
Industrial Strategy, my hon. Friend the Member for
Burton (Andrew Griffiths), this afternoon to discuss
this topic. The Government-backed Women’s Business
Council’s recent toolkit, “Men As Change Agents”, calls
on FTSE 350 chief executive officers to embrace three
asks to deliver the required pace of progress,
including sponsoring women from within their
organisation with the potential to secure an executive
role within three years. My hon. Friend is keen to be
an agent of change, and I welcome his support and that
of other male colleagues in driving the progress that
we all want to see.
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I understand that 7% of FTSE 100 companies have women
chief executive officers. By contrast, the figure for
businesses in Latvia is something like 47%. What can we
learn from Latvia?
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Of course we are always willing to look at what is
happening internationally. The hon. Gentleman will know
that the plans in the Hampton-Alexander review are
ambitious. For example, they require businesses, before
2020, to recruit women for one in two senior roles that
now exist if business is to meet that goal. If it does
not, the Hampton-Alexander review panel will look at
what more should be done to encourage business to do
so.
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One way to encourage more women through to the highest
levels of business is strong mentoring. What more can
be done to help spread that and roll it out further?
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Mentoring is just one way, and there is a lot of
evidence to suggest that sponsorship is very successful
in driving women up the career ladder. That is
precisely why the Hampton-Alexander review has given
help through the Women’s Business Council and the
toolkit. We have encouraged businesses to sponsor women
within their organisation and to engage CEOs and other
senior business leaders as change agents in championing
the change required.
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The Scottish Government have delivered a returners
programme to assist women to re-enter the workforce
following a career break. Will the UK Government
consider doing something similar to ensure that women
in England and Wales continue their career progression
towards the highest levels of business?
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Indeed. We have a scheme for exactly that. At the
moment, we are looking at how best to spend that money,
and I have a particular focus on teachers and social
care workers to see if we can encourage them back into
their professions. There is a much bigger challenge
here for the private sector to make sure that women who
have taken a break for caring reasons are encouraged
back into the workforce, because we know that financial
independence is a critical factor in making sure women
have successful lives.
Domestic Abuse: Health Priorities
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7. What discussions she has had with Cabinet
colleagues on treating domestic abuse as a health
priority. [905383]
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This Government are firmly committed to tackling
domestic abuse. On 8 March, alongside the announcement
of the domestic abuse consultation, we announced an
additional £2 million to improve the health response,
offering further support to survivors of domestic
abuse. The Home Secretary chairs an inter-ministerial
group on violence against women and girls to ensure
that all Departments, including the Department of
Health and Social Care, work together to treat crimes
such as domestic abuse as a priority.
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I thank the Minister for her answer. She may be aware
that, according to the SafeLives report published last
year, early intervention through hospitals can reach
four out of five victims who would not have reported
the abuse to the police. Will she therefore outline
what plans her Government have to ensure that all
hospitals, in their A&E and maternity units, have
onsite domestic abuse support workers?
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The hon. Lady identifies a key touchstone for reaching
women who perhaps have not been able to find the space
or the courage to meet people who can give them help.
There is a great deal of work going on, particularly
with hospitals, as part of the £2 million package I
announced earlier.
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11. Although the Government say that victims of
domestic abuse can apply for split payment of universal
credit, a survey by Women’s Aid shows that 85% of
survivors say they would not dare apply as an
exceptional measure, as it would attract further abuse.
Is the Minister for Women and Equalities willing to
meet me to discuss the importance of delivering split
payments as the default to protect the financial
independence of women? [905387]
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The hon. Lady and I have already met to discuss this,
and I know that she is greatly concerned. I am
discussing the issue with my colleagues in the
Department for Work and Pensions, and of course the
Minister for Women and Equalities will meet her to
discuss it further. We are very clear that the DWP and
those who work in jobcentres are a gateway to
potentially offering support and help to women who
present with those symptoms.
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Last week, I visited a refuge run by Hestia, the
organiser behind next week’s “UK Says No More”
campaign—I have spare badges. Hestia tells me that
nearly 1 million children every year are affected by
domestic abuse, yet there are no meaningful resources
to help tackle the mental health issues experienced by
those children. What more are the Government prepared
to do to provide resources to address the mental health
issues of the children affected?
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I thank the hon. Lady for that. I know that she is
personally very committed to this subject. I was
delighted to join Hestia this week at its launch event
for a piece of technology that I believe will have a
real effect on helping survivors and victims of
domestic abuse. We are allocating £8 million
specifically to help children who witness domestic
abuse in their homes, because we all recognise the
great harm this can cause children, both at the time of
the abuse and in the longer term. That is precisely why
children will be at the heart of the draft domestic
abuse Bill, which will be presented to this House in
due course.
Gender Recognition Act 2004
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8. When the Government plans to launch the
consultation on reform of the Gender Recognition Act
2004. [905384]
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The Government Equalities Office will publish a
consultation on the 2004 Act shortly. Our national LGBT
survey received more than 100,000 responses and we are
using the results to shape the questions in the
consultation.
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I thank the Minister for that answer. On this
International Day against Homophobia, Transphobia and
Biphobia, what message will her Department give to the
Great British media that discrimination against trans
people is unacceptable?
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I would be very happy to send that message from this
Dispatch Box today. It is crucial that as we consult
and discuss sensitive issues we do so in a climate of
respect, empathy and understanding. Anything that runs
counter to that must cease.
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I welcome the Minister to her place. May I take this
opportunity to recognise the International Day against
Homophobia, Transphobia and Biphobia? As part of the
consultation, will the Government make the necessary
legislative changes to allow non-binary people to
record their gender as X on passports and on other
UK-wide records and identity documents?
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If this long-awaited consultation is to have impact and
be of good use, it should consult on a wide range of
issues, some of which should be the non-binary issues.
Gendered Online Abuse
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9. What discussions she has had with social media
companies on tackling gendered online abuse on their
platforms. [905385]
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The Government are committed to making the UK the
safest place to be online. Ministers and officials at
the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport
have had meetings with a range of social media
companies to discuss abuse, including misogynistic
abuse, on online platforms as part of our consultation
on internet safety, to which we will respond
imminently.
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I thank the Minister for her answer. Half of all girls
in the UK suffer online abuse and are bullied on social
media. Girls are being told what to wear. They are
being told to shut up about their opinions. They are
being told about how they look. Is it not about time
this Government take a serious look at this awful
sexism and seek to regulate social media platforms?
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I very much share the hon. Lady’s strong opinions,
which are based on the facts: girls are intimidated and
bullied disproportionately online, for all the reasons
she sets out. I urge her to wait a very short time for
our response to the internet safety consultation, which
I trust will be robust.
Domestic Abuse: Support for Women
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10. What steps the Government are taking to
support women who are experiencing domestic
abuse. [905386]
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12. What steps the Government are taking to
support women who are experiencing domestic
abuse. [905389]
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This Government have introduced a new offence of
coercive and controlling behaviour, rolled out new
tools such as domestic violence protection orders and
committed £100 million to supporting victims of
violence against women and girls. On 8 March, we
launched the consultation on domestic abuse, which will
include not just the draft Bill, but a package of
non-legislative measures to take steps to further
support victims and target perpetrators of this
terrible crime.
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I am grateful to the Minister for that response.
However, in 2016, the Ministry of Justice closed the
courts in Halifax, and I hear from West Yorkshire
police that it is now routinely taking up to 12 months
for domestic abuse victims to have their cases heard in
the neighbouring courts in Leeds, Bradford and
Huddersfield. How have we allowed that to happen?
Victims are withdrawing from that process. What are we
doing to put this right?
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I am concerned to hear that. If I may, I will take that
away and discuss it with my colleagues in the Ministry
of Justice. In west London, the tri-borough scheme
includes specific specialist domestic abuse courts. I
am currently looking into that, because there may be
more that we can do in that regard throughout the
country.
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At Women and Equalities questions on 29 March, I asked
the Minister about the concerns of Women’s Aid and
other domestic violence charities about the changes to
supported housing funding, and I asked her to liaise
with her colleagues in the Ministry of Housing,
Communities and Local Government. Can she assure us
that the concerns of Women’s Aid and other charities
have been taken into consideration? What discussions
has she had with that Ministry?
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Discussions are ongoing; I speak constantly to my
colleagues across the Government about the support we
offer to victims of domestic abuse. The hon. Lady will
know that we committed £20 million to the domestic
abuse accommodation fund, and, like me, she will have
been pleased that we introduced the Secure Tenancies
(Victims of Domestic Abuse) Act 2018 to help the
victims of domestic abuse.
Topical Questions
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T1. If she will make a statement on her departmental
responsibilities. [905391]
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Some 16% of the population is disabled, but their
representation in our Parliaments, Assemblies and
councils is far too low. It is primarily political
parties’ responsibility to support their candidates
properly, just as they must also support disabled
employees. That is why I am announcing today that over
the next 12 months my Department will, with others,
undertake a programme of work to help political parties
to best support their disabled candidates and to consider
how independent candidates can be supported, too. While
that work is under way, we will provide up to a quarter
of a million pounds to support disabled candidates for
elections in the forthcoming year. I shall keep the House
updated.
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It was an honour and my privilege to have whipped the
equal marriage Bill through this House. Will the Minister
complete that work by abolishing civil partnerships?
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Although the demand for civil partnerships has tailed off
since my right hon. Friend’s efforts were brought to bear
on that Bill, they are extremely valued by some people,
and others would also like the opportunity to have a
civil partnership. We are looking into the issue and have
commissioned some additional research into opinions on
and attitudes towards civil partnerships, but whatever
the outcome of that research, I assure my right hon.
Friend that they will not be compulsory.
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I congratulate the Minister and welcome her to her new
role. In the past 12 months, I have congratulated no
fewer than three Ministers on their appointment to the
role. [Interruption.] “Get used to it,” I hear from a
sedentary position, and that is exactly the problem.
Responsibility for women and equalities has been passed
from the Home Office to the Department for Culture, Media
and Sport, to the Department for Education, then back to
the Home Office, and now it is with the Department for
International Development. To add insult to injury, the
Government Equalities Office will see its funding cut by
almost half. All that does not really scream a commitment
to women and equalities. Does the Minister agree that the
Equalities Office needs a stable Department with proper
funding?
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I thank the hon. Lady for her welcome. We do need to
stabilise the work of the GEO and to increase what we are
doing on the equalities agenda across the Government. We
have done some tremendous things in recent years, and we
need to build on that work if we are really to address
inequalities, not only in the policy areas for which I am
directly responsible but across the Government, including
in disability, age discrimination and elsewhere. Since I
have taken this post, I have given this a lot of thought,
and I will make some announcements in the forthcoming
weeks.
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T2. Equality of access to education and schooling
opportunities for women and girls in the developing world
is central to their life chances. What steps is my right
hon. Friend taking to support initiatives to widen access
to education and schooling for women and
girls? [905393]
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I thank my hon. Friend for his question. There are some
good tie-ups between the work of the Department for
International Development and the Women and Equalities
role. I hope that I will be able to help both Departments
by being the joint Minister. We spend around £1 billion
on education, half of which is specifically to help girls
to access good-quality education. Most recently, we
announced a further £212 million of funding through the
girls’ education challenge, to ensure that almost a
million more marginalised girls throughout the
Commonwealth can receive good-quality education.
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Earlier in questions, the sharing of data and the working
together of Departments in relation to domestic abuse and
domestic violence was mentioned. Some time ago, I had a
constituent whose data was shared, which meant that she
had to come out of hiding, where she was being protected,
and to move to another place because of that sharing of
data by the Department for Work and Pensions. I know that
that is something that the Minister is working on, but
can she ensure that the highest possible resource and
focus is given to this issue, because my constituent’s
life was put in danger by the fact that her data was
shared with her ex-partner?
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I am dismayed to hear that. Clearly, that is not the
intention of the amendments to the Data Protection Bill.
We have put a declaratory statement in the Bill to
encourage and give confidence to all the agencies
involved in safeguarding that, under the Bill, they do
have the right to share information for the purposes of
safeguarding. I am extremely concerned to hear of the
hon. Lady’s case, and if she will write to me please, I
will look into it.
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T3. What measures is the Minister taking to tackle
the rise of anti-Semitism? [905395]
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I thank my hon. Friend for his question; it is an
extremely important and pertinent one. The number of
anti-Semitic incidents in the UK is both unacceptable
and, frankly, frightening for anyone of a Jewish
background or disposition. We should all do what we can
to tackle it. Our relationship with the Jewish community
has been built on the solid work of the cross-Government
working group on tackling anti-Semitism, which ensures
that any issues are brought forward quickly and are dealt
with. The Government are providing more than £13.4
million to ensure the security of Jewish faith schools,
synagogues and communal buildings, following the concerns
raised by the Jewish community. I wish that we did not
have to spend that money, but we do, and we are.
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Will the new Minister, whom I, too, congratulate, now
publish the long-awaited inquiry of the previous Home
Secretary, the right hon. Member for Hastings and Rye
(Amber Rudd), into the safety of women accessing abortion
clinics? Will she also take up the recommendation of 160
parliamentarians, including David Steel, author of the
Abortion Act 1967, to introduce buffer zones?
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May I thank the hon. Lady, who has run such an effective
campaign on this, and the colleagues across the House who
have written about this matter to my right hon. Friend
the Home Secretary? As she knows, the previous Home
Secretary, in her capacity as both Home Secretary and
Minister for Women and Equalities, took this subject
extremely seriously, as does the new Home Secretary. We
are drawing together the evidence and looking at it very
carefully, and we will, of course, let the House know the
results of that review as soon as we can.
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T4. I welcome the Government’s commitment to
transparency through gender pay gap reporting. Will my
hon. Friend update the House on how many employers have
reported during the first year of this new
scheme? [905397]
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That is a typically astute question by my hon. Friend. As
of 9 o’clock this morning, 10,212 businesses and
organisations had responded, and 95% of all businesses
and organisations that should have replied had done so,
and we are now chasing the other 5%
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The trans community suffers some of the most profound
discrimination across the world. Will the Minister advise
the House what discussions are being held with her
colleagues in the United States of America, where we are
seeing an incremental rolling back of the rights of trans
American citizens that fundamentally undermines the
principles of America’s liberal democracy?
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One thing that I have been conscious of is how the
progress that we have made on these issues and on wider
issues has been a catalyst for change in other countries
all around the world. We in the UK have a very important
role to play. Let me give Members one example. At the
recent Commonwealth Heads of Government summit, our Prime
Minister used the key part of her plenary session to
champion the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender people. We will continue to do that in every
nation on earth.
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Women used to lag well behind men in terms of workplace
pensions. Will the Minister update the House on the
current situation?
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It is true that women used to lag behind men in terms of
workplace pensions, but at 73% their participation rates
are now equal to those of men in the private sector.
Thanks to auto-enrolment, 10,000 men and women in my hon.
Friend’s constituency now have a private pension. Thanks
are also due to the 1,670 employers assisting them.
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Particularly given her statement at the start of topical
questions, will the Minister for Women and Equalities
tell us what progress she has made in getting the
position of disability commissioner reinstated at the
Equality and Human Rights Commission?
-
I have been aware of this issue for some time, from a
previous brief, and I can tell my hon. Friend that the
commission is currently going through a tailored review
that will look at the structures it has in place to
represent and hear the views of disabled people and
enable commissioners to focus on their needs and rights.
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