Difference between revisions of "Theresa May"
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==LGBT issues== | ==LGBT issues== | ||
− | Her voting record on LGBT issues has been mixed. In 1998 she voted against equalising the [[age of consent]], and in 2000 she voted against the repeal of [[Section 28]]<ref>[https://www.pinknews.co.uk/2010/05/12/analysis-how-pro-gay-is-the-new-home-secretary-and-minister-for-equality-theresa-may/ "Analysis: How pro-gay is the new home secretary and minister for equality Theresa May?"] ''Pink News'', 12 My 2010.</ref> However she was later responsible for helping to draft the legislation with Equalities Minister [[Lynne Featherstone]] which led to the implementation of [[same sex marriages]] in 2014. She was the one to suggest the Conservatives were planning to look at introducing gay marriage in 2010 and later said she had changed her mind on gay adoption. She told ''Question Time'': “I have changed my view. If those votes were taken today, I would take a different vote. | + | Her voting record on LGBT issues has been mixed. In 1998 she voted against equalising the [[age of consent]], and in 2000 she voted against the repeal of [[Section 28]]<ref>[https://www.pinknews.co.uk/2010/05/12/analysis-how-pro-gay-is-the-new-home-secretary-and-minister-for-equality-theresa-may/ "Analysis: How pro-gay is the new home secretary and minister for equality Theresa May?"] ''Pink News'', 12 My 2010.</ref> However she was later responsible for helping to draft the legislation with Equalities Minister [[Lynne Featherstone]] which led to the implementation of [[same-sex marriages]] in 2014. She was the one to suggest the Conservatives were planning to look at introducing gay marriage in 2010 and later said she had changed her mind on gay adoption. She told ''Question Time'': “I have changed my view. If those votes were taken today, I would take a different vote. |
In her book on the passage of the law, Baroness Featherstone praised Ms May as the “unsung hero” in the push for gay marriage against the furious protests of some elements of the Tory grassroots. | In her book on the passage of the law, Baroness Featherstone praised Ms May as the “unsung hero” in the push for gay marriage against the furious protests of some elements of the Tory grassroots. |
Revision as of 15:58, 7 March 2022
Theresa May (née Brasier; born 1956) is a Conservative politician. She was elected as the MP for Maidenhead in 1997. She served as Home Secretary from 2010 to 2016. She became Prime Minister in 2016, succeeding David Cameron and stepped down in 2019, being succeeded by Boris Johnson. Her time as Prime Minister was dominated by the negotiations over the UK's exit from the European Union.
LGBT issues
Her voting record on LGBT issues has been mixed. In 1998 she voted against equalising the age of consent, and in 2000 she voted against the repeal of Section 28[1] However she was later responsible for helping to draft the legislation with Equalities Minister Lynne Featherstone which led to the implementation of same-sex marriages in 2014. She was the one to suggest the Conservatives were planning to look at introducing gay marriage in 2010 and later said she had changed her mind on gay adoption. She told Question Time: “I have changed my view. If those votes were taken today, I would take a different vote.
In her book on the passage of the law, Baroness Featherstone praised Ms May as the “unsung hero” in the push for gay marriage against the furious protests of some elements of the Tory grassroots. But others say her stance has not evolved enough with refugee campaigners saying the conditions and treatment of LGBT asylum seekers had worsened during her tenure as Home Secretary.[2]
References
- ↑ "Analysis: How pro-gay is the new home secretary and minister for equality Theresa May?" Pink News, 12 My 2010.
- ↑ "All the anti-gay and lesbian stances Theresa May has taken in her political career" The Independent, 26 April 2017.