What is the SNP doing for women’s equality?
The SNP will stand up for gender equality at every turn – working for an end to austerity, for equal pay, more and better jobs and to end the barriers that still block the aspirations of too many women in Scotland and across the UK.
To increase the number of women in leadership roles across the wider public sector, we have passed the Gender Representation on Public Boards (Scotland) Bill. The new law – the first of its kind in the UK – will ensure that 50 per cent of non-executive members on public boards in Scotland are women.
We will encourage organisations to sign up to the Business Pledge, including the commitment to workforce diversity, and to join the Partnership for Change campaign to set a voluntary commitment for gender balance in their boardrooms of 50:50 by 2020.
We also require all public authorities with more than 20 employees to publish their pay gap every two years and an equal pay statement every four years, and will call on the UK government to follow this lead. SNP MPs will also support lowering the current threshold for gender pay reporting to 150 employees and the introduction of sanctions, including fines, for employers that fail to comply with the law.
We are ensuring that the voices of women and girls are heard at the highest levels of politics. The First Minister has established an Advisory Council on Women and Girls to inform the Scottish Government on the inequalities they face and how best to tackle it.
We have also established a working group to tackle pregnancy and maternity discrimination in the workplace. And at Westminster will fight to protect the rights of pregnant women and new mothers afforded under EU laws.
We are investing £185,000 to help women who have had career breaks back into the workplace, by investing in six Returners projects.
Nicola Sturgeon is Scotland’s first female First Minister and her Cabinet is one of only a handful in the world that is gender balanced – we are equally determined to improve gender balance in the Scottish Parliament. In last year’s Scottish Parliament election we had more female candidates than ever before and 43 per cent of SNP MSPs are now women, up from 27.5 per cent in 2011.