![]() ![]() ![]() Women are finally winning the numbers game. Indeed, we are just a couple of years off the centenary of women having the right to sit in the House of Commons -the first to take her seat was the American-born Conservative Nancy Astor in 1919. Even less so does suffragette leader Emmeline Pankhurst play to any of these stereotypes, but she nonetheless ended her days as the Conservative Party candidate for Whitechapel and St George, a fact that today’s Conservative Women’s Organisation is only too pleased to celebrate on their website. ![]() How do we make sense of political women on the Right, especially those strong formidable women who defied stereotypes of the domestic drudge who would never dream of voting otherwise than her ‘man of the house’, the meek housewife very much at home in patriarchy and the paragon of family values, or the well-heeled and usually titled socialite exercising her power behind the throne? Margaret Thatcher was never convincing as her husband Denis’ domestic goddess, though she tried hard to project herself as the household budgeter projected onto national level, consumer of all things M&S, and breakfast cook extraordinaire. ![]()
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