Baroness Sayeeda Warsi Named U.K. Minister and Tory Party Chairwoman

Posted on May 16, 2010
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Foreign Relations, Pakistanis Abroad, People, Women
24 Comments
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Adil Najam

David Cameron, the new Conservative Party Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, has named 39-year old, Baroness Sayeeda Warsi of Dewsbury whose family hails from Gujjar Khan, Pakistan, as a Minister without portfolio (at this time) in and UK Cabinet and as Chairwoman of the Conservative Party.

Lady Warsi becomes the first Muslim woman and the first woman of Pakistani origin to hold a UK cabinet position. Although she is not the first Pakistani to hold a UK cabinet position, she is certainly the highest profile Pakistani to do so.

Another Briton of Pakistani descent, Sadiq Khan, had earned the distinction of being the first Pakistani and Muslim in a U.K. cabinet as Gordon Brown’s Minister of State for Transport. Earlier, Shahid Malik – who had defeated her for her hometown Dewsbury, Yorkshire, sear in 2005 – was selected in 2007 as Gordon Brown’s under-secretary of state for international development (which, although not a cabinet position, is a significant and high position in the UK government. Although never elected to office by a direct vote, Lady Warsi is a Life Peer in 2007.

According to a report in Dawn:

In Pakistan, a country where many fear they are being stigmatised as “terrorists”, people are jubilant over her appointment.

Born into a modest family which migrated from Pakistan’s central town of Gujjar Khan to Britain in the 1960s, Warsi has been involved in politics since her college days. Newspapers prominently published photos of Warsi standing in front of 10 Downing Street and television channels interviewed her proud relatives and family friends in Gujjar Khan. Warsi runs five vocational training centres for orphaned girls in villages near Gujjar Khan through a women’s charity. Cameron visited Gujjar Khan with her in 2008. “We feel proud that she is from us,” said Hina Shaukat, a student in a vocational training centre in Bewal village near Gujjar Khan. Eight girls sat around her, busily sewing.

According to a post in the Dewsbury Reporter:

Baroness Warsi said she was ‘hugely privileged and deeply humbled’ by her appointment as Conservative Party chairwoman and minister without portfolio. She said: “The main role which David Cameron has asked me to do will be operating a central office, making sure voluntary parties and new MPs are supported, and campaigning. Over the last three years I’ve been to more target seats than any member of the shadow cabinet apart from David, and I was with him on the marathon 36-hour final leg of the campaign.”

Earlier in 2009, Baroness Sayeeda Wasti had been named the most influencial Muslim woman in Britian in 2009:

In a news report headlined “Britain’s first female Muslim Cabinet Minister Baroness Warsi brightens up Downing Street” the British Daily The Telegraph writes:

Baroness Warsi posed in Downing Street in traditional dress after the coalition Cabinet’s historic first meeting. After gamely removing her coat at the request of photographers and hanging it on a railing, the former solicitor, from Dewsbury, West Yorkshire, said: “To be born as the daughter of an immigrant mill worker in a mill town in Yorkshire, to have the privilege of serving in Cabinet at such an important time in Britain’s history, I think it is terribly humbling.”

Lady Warsi’s pink shalwar kameez was in sharp contrast to the dark suits sported by most of the other, predominantly male, Cabinet members. Like many of the new ministers, she described yesterday’s meeting as “very constructive”. “There was a great amount of goodwill around the table. There’s lots of hard work to do and some serious decisions to be taken,” she added. Lady Warsi, 39, the former shadow minister for community cohesion, is the new chairman of the Tory Party, replacing Eric Pickles, who became local government secretary.

24 responses to “Baroness Sayeeda Warsi Named U.K. Minister and Tory Party Chairwoman”

  1. Taimur says:

    Great achievement. And a positive and more real face of Pakistani women than we often see in the media.

    Now lets wait for all Pakistan and Muslim haters to jump up and down on this :-)

  2. Raheel says:

    Isn’t it amazing to see her wearing Shalwar Qamees. Not because she looks Pakistani but it shows the humbleness of British people.

    & well done Lady Warsi!

  3. Hina S says:

    I’ll confess I don’t know much about British Politics except the very very basic. Having said that, hats off to the Conservative party for nominating the first Muslim woman ever to serve in a British cabinet.

    I Googled her and stumbled upon an interesting piece titled “Tory Muslim peer pelted with eggs” An on air confrontation between her and some local Muslim men on UK streets who judged her “as not being a proper Muslim”.
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/beds/bu cks/herts/8387110.stm

    I am imprressed with what little I’ve seen of Sayeeda Warsi, will be keeping an eye on her career from now on.

  4. Faria says:

    Only a Pakistani could put a damper on a fellow Pakistanis celebrating the fact that someone from their background has made it. No other community has such qualms celebrating such achievements We British Pakistanis are very proud of our roots and do not suffer the inferiority complex that, unbelievably many Pakistanis carry around.

    It is simplistic and quite worrying that people suggest having a multi-faceted identity is somehow immoral. Wake Up! It is the 21st Century, and people have a multitude of identities. Americans of every national background support and celebrate achievements of their own. More recently, Kenyans celebrated Obama’s victory as a victory of theirs.

    The task is to ensure we reach a stage when people and nations are allowed to feel comfortable and easy with these prevailing winds . The world will be better for it.

    The colonial mindset has long been confined to the dustbins of history for us in the UK. Being ‘more loyal to the king’ no longer holds us back in celebrating and appreciating our entire makeup.

  5. MB says:

    I shall only repeat what the fellow said up there :

    [Come out of the delusion. She is not Pakistani. She is a British born Britisher and our zeal with her being Pakistani is likely to become a liability for her. Imagine people in Amritsar cheering on Nawaz becoming PM, that our boy is PM. How will “Patriotic” (read bigoted Pakistanis) react to it?
    Pakistanis are not even a race like Jews, they are a heterogeneous nation, and the only qualifier is global norms of nationality.
    But the people who want to work in West, earn in $s and yet portray themselves as the Uncles (mama) of Pakistan, wouldn’t understand.
    Choose to be an American, Brit, if you live there, for I will do no less. Having divided loyalties is dishonest.
    ]

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