Garrick Club asked to consider membership for
seven leading women
A group of men at the club who hope the male-only rule
will change have nominated a set of possible new members
Amelia
Gentleman
Thu 28 Mar
2024 19.58 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2024/mar/28/garrick-club-seven-women-nominated-membership
Seven women
with leading positions in the British establishment have been nominated as
prospective female members of the Garrick in the event that the club agrees to
change its rules so that women are able to join.
The
classicist Mary Beard, the former home secretary Amber Rudd, Channel 4 News
presenter Cathy Newman and the new Labour peer Ayesha Hazarika are among the
first names to have been put forward to the club as possible future members.
Also on the
list are the actor Juliet Stevenson, Margaret Casely-Hayford, who chairs the
trustees of Shakespeare’s Globe and is chancellor of Coventry University, and
Elizabeth Gloster, formerly an appeal court judge.
A group of
Garrick members who hope the rules on female members will change have
tentatively proposed these names to the club’s administration seeking
confirmation that they would, in theory, be eligible for admission to the club.
Stephen
Fry, the broadcaster Matt Frei and the opera singer Ian Bostridge were among
the signatories proposing these women as potential future members. After
securing confirmation from the women that they were happy in principle to be
put up as club members, the proposers sent their names to the Garrick chair on
Wednesday, asking for guidance on how to proceed.
The release
of the women’s names marks an attempt by members to initiate a damage
limitation exercise to protect the Garrick’s battered reputation, after a
string of high-profile resignations from the club after controversy over the
Guardian’s publication of a long list of names of senior figures from
Whitehall, politics, the arts and the judiciary as members of a club that has
repeatedly blocked the admission of women since the 1960s.
Last week
the head of MI6, Richard Moore, and the head of the civil service, Simon Case,
resigned from the club, after deciding that membership was incompatible with
their organisations’ commitment to improving diversity. By Monday, at least
four judges had tendered their resignations from the Garrick.
On Thursday
the Bar Council, the professional body for barristers, warned that exclusive
members’ clubs created “the potential for unfair advantage” for lawyers seeking
to become judges. “Closed doors and exclusionary spaces do not foster support
or collaboration between colleagues,” the organisation’s chair said.
Made public
for the first time by the Guardian, the club’s closely guarded membership book
includes dozens of judges, dozens of members of the House of Lords, the deputy
prime minister, the secretary of state for levelling up, the chief executive of
the Royal Opera House, at least 10 MPs, heads of influential thinktanks, law
firms, private equity companies, academics, prominent actors, rock stars and
senior journalists.
Mary Beard
said: “I have enjoyed my visits to the Garrick and would love to become a
member. If they won’t have me, there might be many reasons – I won’t be suing
them, but it will have been worth a shot.”
Another of
the new nominees said she was reluctant to be quoted publicly at this stage,
but added: “My view is that when I was approached I thought it was a bit
hypocritical to decline the invitation after spending years railing against
all-male bastions.”
The club’s
managing committee is considering a new legal opinion given by the David
Pannick KC, who led the successful Brexit article 50 case against the
government, advising that the current rules at the men-only do not in fact bar
women from being members.
The club’s
chair, Christopher Kirker, wrote to members last week, informing them that in
light of the “very unpleasant publicity which we all deplore” the club’s
management was urgently considering the new legal advice, to see whether women
should be admitted immediately.
“We are
aware that there are strong views. But let us not be hasty. All is being
carefully considered,” he wrote, adding that he would contact members again
with further thoughts on 4 April.
This is not
the first time that women have been nominated to the men-only club in the face
of regulations prohibiting women from joining. In 2011 Hugh Bonneville proposed
fellow actor Joanna Lumley; his decision to write her name in the book of
proposed candidates triggered such anger among some of the club’s 1,500 members
that the page was ripped out from the nomination book. Some members scrawled
expletives on her nomination page, and one wrote: “Women aren’t allowed here
and never will be.”
Mary Ann
Sieghart, the author of The Authority Gap: Why Women Are Still Taken Less
Seriously Than Men, warned that nominating women was no guarantee that the club
would allow them to join. The leading human rights lawyer Anthony Lester had
hoped to propose her as a member in the later 1990s, but the then club chair
blocked the suggestion (and took her for lunch in the club instead).
Responding
to widespread bemusement about why there has been such an outcry about whether
membership of a club for men in elite roles should be extended to women in
similarly elite positions, she said: “The Garrick may be an elite club, but its
membership matters precisely because it’s elite. Its members hold powerful
positions in government, the judiciary, the media and the arts. These are
people who run the country, and if women are excluded from this elite, then the
establishment will remain overwhelmingly male. And that
matters for all of us.”
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