No longer the laggard - how France leapfrogged the UK for women's representation.

AuthorMurray, Rainbow
PositionEssays

British women have long envied their chic French counterparts. However, when it comes to political representation, women have traditionally fared better north of the English Channel. From 1955 onwards, with a brief exception for the period 1978-87, there have been more women in the House of Commons than in the French National Assembly. The UK also had its own Iron Lady running the country for eleven years, whereas France has never had a female President. The only French women to serve as Prime Minister, Edith Cresson, lasted less than a year and was the shortest-serving Prime Minister of the Fifth Republic. She suffered widespread sexist vilification, and no woman has followed in her footsteps since she stood down in 1992. Even following the introduction of a gender parity law in 2000, requiring an equal number of male and female candidates at most elections, the proportion of women MPs remained lower in France than in the UK.

Yet in 2012, a different picture suddenly emerged. The proportion of women in the National Assembly shot up to nearly 27 per cent, which compares favourably to the 22 per cent of women in Westminster. In addition, newly elected French President Francois Hollande attracted positive headlines for nominating 50 per cent women to his new cabinet, while British Prime Minister David Cameron made headlines of a rather different sort when the number of female ministers in his cabinet fell even further from five to just four. Almost overnight, France went from being a laggard to being a role model for her European neighbours, not least the UK, which now has one of the lowest levels of women's representation in the whole of Europe.

This article considers how France achieved this transformation, whether the reality lives up to the headlines, and whether the UK should now be taking heed of, and seeking to copy, its Gallic neighbour. The improved situation for women in French politics was less an overnight success than a long, slow process of feminisation that is still far from complete. Sexism and barriers to women remain rife in French politics, and gender equality is elusive on both sides of the Channel. What distinguishes France from her British neighbours is that she is more aware that there is a problem, and has taken greater steps to increase women's presence in politics. Unless Britain also acknowledges the severity of its political gender gap, the gulf between the two countries looks set to widen further in the coming years, with Britain increasingly being left behind by its European neighbours.

Women's representation in parliament

The last two elections in France each saw the proportion of women in parliament increase by 50 per cent, going from 12.3 per cent in 2002 to 18.5 per cent in 2007 and 26.9 per cent in 2012. There are two main reasons for these rises. The first is France's parity law, and the second is the return to power of the left. The parity law has led to a significant rise in the number of women candidates competing for office. However, the parity law has two major flaws that have prevented it from achieving its stated goals.

Firstly, it applies only to the number of women candidates, and not to the number of women elected. As a result, French parties frequently place women candidates in unwinnable seats (Murray et al., 2012). Secondly, the law is implemented by means of a loss in state financial subsidies for parties who do not field sufficient numbers of women candidates. French parties receive state funding in two portions: the first pertains to how many votes they receive, and the second to how many seats they win. Seats attract significantly more funding than votes. Small parties who win few or no seats have no choice but to implement parity, whereas the larger parties will be more concerned with winning seats. If they feel that replacing a popular male incumbent with a lesser known female candidate might cost them the seat, they will consider it more costly to implement parity than to suffer the financial penalty for failing to do so. Hence, the parties most likely to implement parity are the same parties who have little or no bearing on the composition of parliament, while larger parties are more likely to use the income from seats won to offset the losses made through disregarding parity. This has been particularly true of parties on the right: the centre-right party, New Centre, has never elected a woman to office, while the main party of the right, the UMP, lost 36.5 per cent of the first portion of its state funding, equating to [euro]4 million a year, or 15.3 per cent of its total income. The consequence of these two flaws with the parity law is that, twelve years and three general elections after introducing a parity law, France is still a long way away from its stated goal of 50 per cent women in politics.

Given the limitations of the parity law, especially when applied by parties of the right, the second explanation for the recent rises in the number of women deputies (MPs) is perhaps the more important. Most of the gains made to date have been achieved by parties of the left. These parties have fielded significantly more women candidates than their right-wing counterparts (see Table 1), and have made a greater effort to place these women in winnable seats. Parties from all sides of the political spectrum have been guilty of placing women in less winnable seats than men (Murray, 2010), but left-wing parties have made more of an effort to ensure that at least some women are selected in winnable seats. For example, the Socialist Party (PS) has a policy similar to that of Labour's all-women shortlists (AWS), whereby some of their target seats are reserved for a woman candidate. This policy has been crucial in ensuring that women are not relegated only to those seats that they cannot hope to win. The sizeable victory of the left in 2012 (Evans, 2012) was therefore a key explanation for the rise in the number of women deputies, in much the same way that Labour's landslide in 1997 led to an overnight doubling of the number of women in Westminster. Table 1 reveals that the percentage of women elected on the right actually declined in 2012, as many female incumbents were defending seats with small majorities that their party had not expected to win in the previous election, and they were therefore particularly vulnerable to the swing away from the right in 2012. In contrast, ten years in opposition had allowed the PS to rid themselves at least in part of the common problem in France of (male) former incumbents wishing to contest seats that they had previously held and then lost. Instead, swing seats that were won by the right in 2007 and expected to return to the left in 2012 were opened up to new candidates, a significant proportion of whom were women.

Table 1: Percentage of women candidates and women elected in France, 2002-12 Party % women % women candidates elected 2002 2007 2012 2002 2007 2012 Communists 43.6% 46.5% 47.8% 18.2% 16.7% 20% (a) Greens (b) 49.8%...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT