Turnover in the role of Minister for Women and Equalities, and
its part-time nature, risks undermining the effectiveness of
equality policy and giving the impression that equalities issues
are peripheral to day to day Government, says
the Women and Equalities Committee. The
constant movement of the Government Equalities Office (GEO)
around Whitehall is also unsustainable if the office is going to
be an effective engine of change towards a more equal society,
the Committee says.
Since 1997, the policy function for women and equalities issues
has been located in eight different government departments. In
the last two years alone, four different Ministers based in three
different departments have held the brief for Women and
Equalities. The most recent change in leadership, with taking on the role after
’s departure, has led to a
situation where the ministerial team is split across two
departments and the civil servants supporting them are in a third
department.
The Committee, in its report published
today, says that each move brings disruption, delay and incurs
costs. MPs state that, as well as stability, the GEO needs
resources, ministerial time and authority for a truly
cross-governmental role that should encompass all equalities
issues including race, age and disability. To achieve this, the
Committee recommends that the GEO and the Minister for Women and
Equalities should be based in the Cabinet Office.
Chair of the Women and Equalities Committee, MP, said:
“The conveyor belt of ministers and continual upheaval at the
GEO has caused unnecessary disruption, delay and is a waste of
taxpayers’ money.
“Equality affects people’s daily lives throughout this
country. With the gender pay gap still too high, women facing
sexual harassment and serious inequalities faced by BAME people,
LGBT groups and people with disabilities, we need the GEO to
focus on tackling these burning injustices not continual
departmental moves and reorganisation. The structures and
leadership that the Government has in place to deal with these
issues matter.
“Leading on equalities across Government needs to be a
full-time role, not an add-on to a busy Secretary of State’s
portfolio. Being based in the Cabinet Office would give the GEO a
stable platform from which to be effective across
Government.
“We look forward to hearing how the new Minister views her
role when she comes to give evidence to us later this
month.”
The Committee recommends:
- A Cabinet sub-committee for equalities should be established
and a cross government equalities strategy developed, both led by
the Minister for Women and Equalities. GEO should be represented
separately and distinctly within the financial accounts and
departmental plan of its current home department.
- The GEO's next move should be to the Cabinet Office. There,
it should co-ordinate and monitor work across Whitehall on all
areas of equalities, with a remit to hold individual departments'
feet to the fire on delivering equality policy in their own
areas.
- The post of Minister for Women and Equalities should find a
home in the Cabinet Office as a full-time role.
ENDS
BACKGROUND: THE WORK OF THE GOVERNMENT EQUALITIES
OFFICE
The Committee, as part of its remit, is responsible for
scrutinising the administration, expenditure and policy of the
Government Equalities Office (GEO).
The Committee held a one-off evidence
session on 9th May with stakeholders and
commentators on the implications of changes to the role of
Minister for Women and Equalities. This was the second on the
Work of the Government Equalities Office in the current
Parliament.
On 11 October
2017 the Committee took evidence from the then Minister
for Women, MP, and the then Minister for
Equalities, MP.
In the previous Parliament, Rt Hon MP gave evidence to the
Committee in January 2017 in
her capacity as Minister for Women and Equalities.
The Committee had been due to hear from Rt Hon MP in her capacity as Minister
for Women and Equalities in March 2018. That session had to be
cancelled at the last minute because of events relating to her
responsibilities as Home Secretary.
Rt Hon MP subsequently took over as
Minister for Women and Equalities on 30 April. The Committee will
take oral evidence from her in her new role in June.