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The Women in the Room - Labour's Forgotten History (Hardcover)
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The Women in the Room - Labour's Forgotten History (Hardcover)
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In February 1900 a group of men representing trade unionists,
socialists, Fabians and Marxists gathered in London to make another
attempt at establishing an organisation capable of getting
working-class men elected to Parliament. The body they set up was
the Labour Representation Committee; six years later when 29 of its
candidates were elected to the House of Commons it changed its name
to the Labour Party. No women took part in that first meeting, but
several watched from the public gallery. Amongst them was Isabella
Ford, an active socialist and trade unionist who would have been
familiar to most of the men assembled below. She had been asked by
her friend, Millicent Fawcett, to attend and report back on what
happened. Millicent was the President of the National Union of
Women's Suffrage Societies, and Isabella had been involved with the
suffrage movement for a long time. A few years later she would
become the first woman to speak at a Labour Party conference,
moving a resolution on votes for women but, at the Party's
inception in 1900, she and every other woman in the hall was
silent. Throughout Labour's history, even in its earliest years,
women were present in the room, but they were not always recorded
or remembered. They came from many different backgrounds and they
worked for the causes they believed in as organisers, campaigners,
negotiators, polemicists, public speakers and leaders. They took on
the vested interests of their time; sometimes they won. Yet the
vast majority of them have been forgotten by the Labour movement
that they helped to found. Even Margaret Bondfield, who became
Britain's first woman cabinet minister, often barely merits a
footnote. Women made real and substantial contributions to Labour's
earliest years and had a significant impact on the Party's ability
to attract and maintain women's votes after World War I. In
addition to Margaret and Isabella, in many of the rooms in which
the Labour Party found its feet, remarkable women wait to be
rediscovered. This book tells their story.
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