Women in the House of Representatives of Jamaica

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Jamaica is the first English-speaking country in the Caribbean to achieve universal adult suffrage and grant women the right to be elected to Parliament.[1] Between 1944 and 2020, a total of 47 women have been elected as Members of the House of Representatives. As of September 2020 there are 18 women in the House of Representatives, the highest ever. This is a new all-time high at 29% and is the first time that female representation in the House of Representatives stands at more than a quarter of the total membership.[2]

Universal Adult Suffrage[]

Iris Collins was the first woman elected to Parliament (1944).
Rose Leon was the first woman cabinet member (1953).
Portia Simpson-Miller is Jamaica's first woman prime minister (2006-2007) and (2011-2016).

Women in Jamaica gained the right to vote in 1919, but that right was subject to property and income requirements.[3] By 1917 there was a branch of the Women's Citizens League was established.[4]

The country was granted full adult suffrage on November 20, 1944. The new system extended voting rights to adults irrespective of their race, sex, or social class.[3]

On December 12 of the same year, Jamaica became only the third state in the British Empire to conduct elections on the basis of universal adult suffrage, preceded only by New Zealand (1893) and the United Kingdom (1918). The election was won by the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP), which claimed 22 seats; the People’s National Party (PNP) and the Independents won five seats each.[5] Of the 32 new members of the Assembly, there was only one woman, Iris Collins, representing the JLP.

Over the period 1944 to 1976, only 5 women had been elected to the House of Representatives: Iris Collins, Rose Leon, Iris King, Enid Bennett, and .

Landmarks and records[]

Political firsts for women in the House of Representatives[]

  • 1944: Women able to stand for Parliament.
  • 1944: First woman elected to Parliament - Iris Collins, (JLP).
  • 1948: First woman to chair a national political party, Rose Leon (JLP)
  • 1953: First woman Cabinet Minister - Rose Leon, (JLP) - minister of health and social welfare.
  • 1955: First woman reelected to Parliament - Rose Leon, (JLP)
  • 1976: First woman to represent more than one constituency - Enid Bennett (JLP).
  • 1976: First woman to cross the floor - Rose Leon (from JLP to PNP).
  • 1976: First woman to be reelected for a third term - Enid Bennett (JLP), Rose Leon (PNP).
  • 1980: First woman to be reelected for a fourth term - Enid Bennett (JLP).
  • 1983: First woman to be reelected for a fifth term - Enid Bennett (JLP).
  • 1989: First woman to be reelected for a sixth term - Enid Bennett (JLP).
  • 1994: First woman General Secretary of a major political party - Maxine Henry-Wilson (PNP).
  • 1997: First woman Speaker of the House of Representatives - Violet Neilson (PNP).
  • 2005: First woman leader of a major political party - Portia Simpson-Miller (PNP).
  • 2006: First woman Prime Minister - Portia Simpson-Miller.
  • 2007: First woman Leader of the Opposition - Portia Simpson-Miller (PNP).
  • 2007: First woman Minister of Justice - Dorothy Lightbourne (JLP).
  • 2007: First woman Attorney General - Dorothy Lightbourne (JLP).
  • 2016: Proportion of women in the House of Representatives exceeds 15% for the first time.
  • 2016: First woman foreign Minister - Kamina Johnson-Smith (JLP)
  • 2019: Proportion of women in the House of Representatives exceeds 20% for the first time.
  • 2020: Proportion of women in the House of Representatives exceeds 25% for the first time.
  • 2020: First woman to serve non-contiguous terms as Speaker of the House of Representatives - Marisa Dalrymple-Philibert (JLP).

Records[]

Portia Simpson-Miller is the longest serving female MP in the history of the House of Representatives. She was MP for Saint Andrew South Western from 1976 to 1983 and from 1989 to until her retirement from active politics in 2017. Enid Bennett was the longest continuously-serving female MP. She was MP for from 1967 to 1976 and represented St. Catherine West Central from 1976 to 1989. Olivia Grange is currently the longest-serving sitting female MP in Parliament.[6]

Party Name Constituency Year elected Year left Length of continuous term Length of cumulative term
PNP Portia Simpson-Miller Saint Andrew South Western 1976 2017 28 years 5 months 35 years 5 months
JLP Enid Bennett St. Catherine Central & St. Catherine West Central 1967 1997 30 years 10 months 30 years 10 months
JLP Olivia Grange Kingston Central & 1993 27 years 6 months 27 years 6 months
JLP Shahine Robinson 2001 2020 19 years 2 months 19 years 2 months

Historic representation[]

As of August 2020, there are 18 female MPs in the House of Representatives, 29% of the House.[2][7] The number of female members from the Jamaica Labour Party is 14 out of 49 members, also 29%, a record for any political party, and also tied with the People's National Party (4 out of 14 members).

The previous record was after the 2016 election when 12 women (19%) was elected to parliament. With the resignation of Portia Simpson-Miller in 2017, this number was temporarily reduced to 11. After by-elections in and 2019, with the election of Angela Brown-Burke and Ann-Marie Vaz, respectively, the number of women in the House of Representatives rose to 13, thus exceeding 20% for the first time.

Women in the House of Representatives by election year and by party[]

Election
Year
Women total JLP Women PNP Women
2020
18 / 63 (29%)
14 / 49 (29%)
4 / 14 (29%)
2016
12 / 63 (19%)
8 / 32 (25%)
4 / 31 (13%)
2011
8 / 63 (13%)
4 / 21 (19%)
4 / 42 (10%)
2007
8 / 60 (13%)
4 / 33 (12%)
4 / 27 (15%)
2002
7 / 60 (12%)
3 / 26 (12%)
4 / 34 (12%)
1997
8 / 60 (13%)
1 / 10 (10%)
7 / 50 (14%)
1993
7 / 60 (12%)
2 / 8 (25%)
5 / 52 (10%)
1989
3 / 60 (5%)
1 / 15 (7%)
2 / 45 (4%)
1983
9 / 60 (15%)
9 / 60 (15%)
(uncontested)
1980
7 / 60 (12%)
6 / 51 (12%)
1 / 9 (11%)
1976
5 / 60 (8%)
2 / 13 (15%)
3 / 47 (6%)
1972
2 / 53 (4%)
1 / 16 (6%)
1 / 37 (3%)
1967
2 / 53 (4%)
2 / 33 (6%)
0 / 20 (0%)
1962
1 / 45 (2%)
1 / 26 (4%)
0 / 19 (0%)
1959
1 / 45 (2%)
0 / 16 (0%)
1 / 29 (3%)
1955
1 / 32 (3%)
1 / 14 (7%)
0 / 18 (0%)
1949
1 / 32 (3%)
1 / 17 (6%)
0 / 13 (0%)
1944
1 / 32 (3%)
1 / 22 (5%)
0 / 10 (0%)

Women Speakers of the House of Representatives[]

Women Speakers 1944–present
1997 Violet Neilson (PNP) No image.svg
2011 Marisa Dalrymple-Philibert (JLP) No image.svg
2020 Marisa Dalrymple-Philibert (JLP) No image.svg

Women Attorneys-General[]

Attorneys-General 1962–present
2007 Dorothy Lightbourne (JLP) No image.svg
2016 Marlene Malahoo Forte (JLP) Marlene Malahoo Forte.jpg

Women in Cabinet[]

Current Female Cabinet members (JLP)[]

Female Cabinet members after 2016 (JLP)[]

Women Cabinet Ministers 1944–present
1953 Rose Leon (JLP) Françoise Foliot - Togo - 041 - Rose Agatha Leon.jpg
1972 Phyllis MacPherson-Russell (PNP) No image.svg
1980 Mavis Gilmour (JLP) No image.svg
1989 Portia Simpson-Miller (PNP) Portia Miller Shoot.Jpeg
2000 Maxine Henry-Wilson (PNP) No image.svg
2006 Aloun Ndombet-Assamba (PNP) No image.svg
2007 Olivia Grange (JLP) No image.svg
2007 Dorothy Lightbourne (JLP) No image.svg
2012 Lisa Hanna (PNP) Lisa Hanna (cropped).jpg
2016 Kamina Johnson-Smith (JLP) Jamaican Foreign Affairs and Trade Minister Kamina Johnson Smith - 2017 (36999447206) (cropped portrait).jpg
2016 Shahine Robinson (JLP) Shahine Robinson official portrait.jpg
2016 Fayval Williams (JLP) Williams-fayval-2017-jm.png

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "A Moment In History – Jamaica Is Granted Universal Adult Suffrage". Jamaica Gleaner. April 21, 2015. Retrieved 2020-09-09.
  2. ^ a b Erica Virtue (September 4, 2020). "JLP floods House with women". Jamaica Gleaner. Retrieved 2020-09-09.
  3. ^ a b "70 years of universal adult suffrage". Jamaica Gleaner. November 21, 2014. Retrieved 2020-09-09.
  4. ^ March 03, ohtadmin | on; 2004. "US Heads Into World War I In March 1917 | Queens Gazette". www.qgazette.com. Retrieved 2021-09-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ "Jamaica General Election Results - 14 December 1944". Caribbean Elections. Retrieved 2020-09-09.
  6. ^ "Jamaica General Election Results (1944-2016)" (PDF). National Library of Jamaica. Retrieved 2020-09-24.
  7. ^ "Women in the House". Jamaica Observer. September 7, 2020. Retrieved 2020-09-08.

External links[]

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