Wychavon celebrates 130th anniversary of women's rights to stand in local elections - The Droitwich Standard
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Wychavon celebrates 130th anniversary of women's rights to stand in local elections

Sonny Rackham 13th Dec, 2024   0

WYCHAVON is celebrating the milestone anniversary of a landmark law which allowed women to stand for local election 130 year ago.

As well as being 50 years, since Wychavon was formed, 2024 is also 130 years since the 1894 Local Government Act was passed.

This enshrined women’s rights to stand for their local district council – the late Victorian version of district councils – and allowed some women to vote in their elections.

It was an early victory in the decades-long struggle to win women equal rights to vote and stand for election, courageously fought for by women such as Pershore’s very own suffragette Florence Feek.

Like most councils across the country, Wychavon has never quite achieved equal representation between the genders amongst its elected councillors, but progress has been made.

Of the 43 councillors elected in 2023, 16 are women. The council’s longest-serving female councillor is Coun Liz Tucker, first elected in 1991.




But there has so far been only one female leader of Wychavon, Coun Linda Robinson in 2015.

Coun Robinson was inspirational in introducing and leading Wychavon’s social mobility work, which continues to change and improve the opportunities and outcomes for some of the district’s most disadvantaged residents.


She said: “This anniversary is an opportunity to reflect on the significant contribution women have made as councillors to the success of Wychavon as both a council and a district over the last 50 years.

“Women’s right to be a part of our democratic process was hard fought and we should never forget the debt we owe to those who blazed a trail for us, so we have the right to earn the honour and privilege of representing our local communities.

“But the fact we still haven’t achieved gender equality in terms of representation on the Council means there is still more to do.

“As political parties, officers, and local government organisations, we need to ask ourselves why there aren’t more women councillors and what can we do to allow more women to seize the opportunity to make a real difference in their communities.”