The following MPs have come out as lgbt since 2015, further consolidate the UK’s position.
Hannah Bardell (Scottish National Party, SNP)
Nick Gibb (Conservative)
Justine Greening (Conservative)
Nia
Griffith (Labour)
Mark
Menzies (Conservative)
David
Mundell (Conservative)
William
Wragg (Conservative).
The illustration of Big Ben’s clock
tower (left) was first used in my article “An Outing to Westminster” in 2015.
Each square represents one elected Member of Parliament. The pink squares
represent the openly lgbt MPs. I have updated it to include the seven more
recent out MPs.
In 2015 there were 155 known openly lgbt
candidates standing for election. Today there are 151. All of the 39 lgbt MPs
who were elected in 2015 are standing for re-election tomorrow.
In 2015 there were four transgender
candidates, none of whom were elected. This time there are seven.
Northern Ireland increases its lgbt
candidates by 400%. That sounds great when written as a percentage, but only
one lgbt candidate stood for election in 2015. Northern Ireland will also see a
new party enter the lgbt political scene. The SDLP will field its first two
openly gay candidates tomorrow.
The table below gives a visual
comparison of the openly lgbt candidates from 2015 and 2017. One square
represents one candidate. The section in the middle represents the candidates
who were elected in 2015 and the seven MPs who came out since. Those seven
candidates are represented with triangles.
The parties in the table are represented
by the following letters:
CONS (Conservative)
LAB (Labour)
LIB DEM
(Liberal Democrat)
SNP (Scottish National Party)
GRN (Green Party)
UKIP (United Kingdom Independence Party)
PC (Plaid Cymru)
ALL (Alliance Party of Northern Ireland)
Although there has been fewer incidents
of openly homophobic campaigning amongst candidates this year there has been
one notable lgbt candidate who pulled out of the election last moth. Jack
Monroe, a prominent author and journalist who identifies as non-binary (there
are two non-binary candidates still in the race for Westminster), withdrew
because of death threats which caused great stress. Monroe was standing as a
candidate for the National Health Action Party.
On a related election note, last Friday
the Republic of Ireland joined Luxemburg in having an openly gay head of
government, Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, who now joins a very exclusive group.
Even though the UK leads the world on elected MPs there is no hint that there
will be an openly lgbt Prime Minister in the foreseeable future.
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