The Haltemprice and Howden by-election ballot paper makes interesting reading. In the absence of two bigĀ mainstream parties, a huge number of independent candidates stood; I wondered how women would fare outside of the normal election environment.
Sadly, only seven of the twenty-six candidates were female. Of these, five were aligned to parties (although these tended to be small and included the Miss Great Britain Party) and two were independent. Contrast this with the nineteen men who stood; fourteen were independent and five had parties, although again given the size of these parties they are probably best counted as independent.
What got me most about the results, however, was that of the seven women standing, six occupied the top positions 2-7 after David Davis. Whether this was due to their being women or that they represented some of the more significant of the small parties is also up for debate- I suspect the latter, but still find it interesting, and somewhat heartening.
Filed under: Brigid Jones's Diary, Elections, Women | Tagged: Hamtemprice and Howden



Thanks for the great info. I hope you’ll follow this with some more great content.