Brighton MP ordered to cover up during Page 3 debate
Caroline Lucas, the Green MP for Brighton Pavilion, was ordered to cover up as she took part in a debate about sexism and Page 3 girls.
Dr Lucas, who was wearing a t-shirt which said âNo more Page Threeâ, was told to put her jacket back on.
She had taken off her jacket at the start of her speech in a Westminster Hall debate in the House of Commons today (Wednesday 12 June).
And before she put her jacket back on she brandished a copy of todayâs Page 3 of The Sun, complete with a photograph of a topless model.
Dr Lucas said: âIt strikes me as a certain irony that in this place people can get copies of The Sun.
âIt strikes me as an irony that this t-shirt is regarded as an inappropriate thing to be wearing in this House, whereas, apparently, it is appropriate for this kind of newspaper to be available to buy in eight different outlets on the Palace of Westminster estate.
âThat is why I have written to the Palace asking for them to be withdrawn and for them not to be on sale until Page 3 is removed.â
Standards
Jim Hood, the Labour MP who was chairing the debate, said: âThere are standards of dress that members must comply with, both in the House and in Westminster Hall.
âI ask her to respect that and to put her jacket back on, which she was wearing when she came in.
âI am not commenting on what the member may wish to say in the debate. I am only addressing the appropriate means of dress.â
Dr Lucas said: âFew things are more important than ensuring that every member of our community feels safe in their own home, workplace, community and school.
âSadly, for far too many women and girls in the UK, that is simply not the case, and there is strong evidence that media sexism is playing a significant contributory role.
âI want to start by outlining some consequences of the fact that objectifying women has become so normalised in our society, before exploring the extent and nature of media sexism, as well as what action is required.
âThe shocking facts are that here in Britain 60,000 women are raped every year.
âTwo women a week are killed by a partner or ex-partner.
âSexual harassment in our schools, communities and workplaces is routine.
Violence
âIn Brighton and Hove, which is home to my constituency, an estimated 11,000 women experience physical and emotional violence every year, and last year more than 2,700 women experienced sexual assault.
âThe cityâs new strategy for prevention offers valuable insights into the way that violence is normalised.â
After being asked to put her jacket back on, Dr Lucas continued: âI was describing a violence against women strategy in Brighton and Hove and was about to quote from it.
âThe cityâs new strategy for prevention offers real insights into the way that violence is normalised, saying that: âViolence against women and girls is a continuum: it is the basic common characteristic that underlies many different events in women and girlsâ lives, involving many forms of intimate intrusion, coercion, abuse and assault, that pass into one another and cannot always be readily distinguished, but that as a continuum are used to control women and girls.
ââMany women and girls learn to discount and minimise forms of violence and abuse both as a way of coping but also because much of it is normalised.â
Epidemic
âThis is not just about extreme cases. It is an epidemic, with the symptoms identifiable at an early age.
âA YouGov poll for the End Violence Against Women coalition found that more than 70 per cent of 16 to 18-year-old boys and girls said that they routinely heard sexual name-calling towards girls at school, and even more disturbingly that one in three girls said that they experienced âgropingâ or other unwanted sexual touching at school.
âA National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children study reveals that almost half of teenage girls believe that it is acceptable for a boyfriend to be aggressive towards a female partner, while one in two boys, and one in three girls, believe that there are some circumstances in which it is OK to hit a woman or force her to have sex.
âThe point I want to make this morning is that none of that is happening in a vacuum.
âWe have to recognise the impact of wider culture, and today I want to focus on just one aspect of that: the objectification of women in the media.
âWomen have been degraded, belittled and served up as sex objects in some of our daily newspapers for many years, despite the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women repeatedly identifying the links between the portrayal of women as sexual objects and attitudes that underpin violence and discrimination against women and girls.
âThe government-commissioned Sexualisation of Young People review found that evidence suggests a clear link between consumption of sexualised images, a tendency to view women as objects and the acceptance of aggressive attitudes and behaviour as the norm.
âThe American Psychological Association reports that viewing media that portray women as sex objects leads people to become significantly more accepting of gender stereotyping, sexual harassment, interpersonal violence and rape myths.
Tragic
âThe scale of the sexism that pervades our media was highlighted last year by womenâs groups, including the End Violence Against Women coalition and Object, which gave evidence to the Leveson inquiry and later published a report called Just the Women.
âIt examined how domestic homicide cases are reported as tragic one-off incidents rather than as part of a well understood pattern of behaviour; how rape cases in some papers are routinely placed next to pictures of half-naked women; how cases of forced marriage or âhonourâ-based violence are explained in terms of culture or religion, or almost anything except violence against women and girls; how news reporting upholds myths about sexual and domestic violence, often implicitly blaming women for violence committed against them, or eroticising such violence; how images and stories which sexualise and objectify women are normalised; and how women, particularly those in political office, are frequently vilified and infantilised by the media.
âLord Justice Levesonâs response concluded: âThe evidence as a whole suggested that there is force in the trenchant views expressed by the groups and organisations who testified to the inquiry that the Page 3 tabloid press often failed to show consistent respect for the dignity and equality of women generally and that there was a tendency to sexualise and demean women.â
âI am not suggesting that the media are solely to blame but their objectification of women goes some considerable way towards explaining why prejudicial attitudes to women are so deeply entrenched and normalised.
âA few months ago, inspired by the brilliant Everyday Sexism and Everyday Media Sexism campaigns, I asked constituents to help me gather evidence of the problem.
âI have since joined forces with womenâs groups in Brighton and Hove to launch the Spot the Sexism campaign, which is a month-long campaign dedicated to sharing experiences of how women are portrayed in the media.
âI would like to give a sense of just a few contributions that I have received so far.
âMore are coming in and I hope that the minister will agree to a meeting later in the year as some of my constituents would very much like the opportunity to talk about their experiences.
âLet me start with a Mail Online story about Britney Spears that appeared on (Friday) 8 March â ironically, on International Womenâs Day.
Struggle
âIt opens like this: âLike many women Britney, who has a net worth of nearly $200 million, appears to struggle to find the right bra.
ââOn this occasion Britney âbooby trapâ appears to be caused by a lack of support â and a sure sign that she needs to use some of her earnings to splash out on some correctly sized lingerie.â
âThe website used eight photos of the singer to make its point.
âOn the same day, the website also carried this headline about a Girls Aloud singer: âBeing on tour certainly suits you! Kimberley Walsh shows off her tiny hourglass figure in a clinging white dress.â
âThe story was illustrated with three virtually identical photos of her in the said dress.
âThe spurious news element in both pieces was presumably that two women had bothered to get dressed before leaving the house but the subtext is that they are worth nothing more than the content of their wardrobes or the shape of their bodies.
âThe frequency with which womenâs looks are used to undermine them was underscored by a Telegraph piece that irritated another of my constituents.
Airbrushed
âIt was about the Conservative candidate for the Eastleigh by-election, in which far more was said about her appearance than her policies â specifically, the fact that the journalist decided that she must have been airbrushed in the billboard posters because the real-life version looked tired and harassed rather than sleek and happy.
âAnother constituent cites every single story in the so-called sidebar of shame in the Mail.
âThe irony, of course, is that that is part of the content aimed directly at women.
âThe Daily Mail comes in for more criticism than most, including for the way that it is still struggling with, as one constituent puts it, âthe right â or is it the wrong â age to have a baby.â
âShe is referring to the endless stream of articles critical of women having children later in life as well as of those having them too young or of working mothers or those who stay at home.
âThe articles accused women of being too old for IVF and quizzed career women who have âfailedâ in their so-called âdutyâ to produce offspring.
âAnother constituent sends this example of media sexism, saying: âThe Sunâs leery front page on Reeva Steenkamp a fortnight ago was particularly outrageous.
âThey wouldnât print a picture of a recently murdered man in his swimming trunks, one hopes.â
Stereotyping
A constituent who complained about a BBC trailer for a childrenâs TV programme, in which girls are shown answering phones and applying make-up while boys are shown operating cameras and reading the news, got this reply: âI can assure you that the trail certainly wasnât designed to perpetuate any negative gender stereotyping.
ââHowever, I fully recognise your concerns about how girls are shown throughout the trail.
ââTo that end Iâd like to assure you that Iâve registered your concerns on our audience log.
ââThe audience logs are seen as important documents that can help shape decisions about future programming and content.â
âWell, the message does not seem to have got through.
âI myself was incensed to see even a trailer for BBC Parliament, that august channel, use clips of exclusively male politicians â there were 12 politicians, all of them male â to depict the cut and thrust of politics.
âI wonder what message that gives to any young girls or women who might be considering going into politics.
âThen, of course, there is Page 3 â a symbol of the fact that pictures that are illegal on workplace walls because of equalities legislation are still allowed to be featured in our newspapers.
Watershed
âSexually objectifying images that would be restricted on broadcast media before the 9pm watershed are printed in national newspapers that are not age-restricted and are displayed at childâs-eye level.
âDefenders of Page 3 argue that adults should be able to choose to look at images of topless women and that anyone who does not like it does not need to buy The Sun.
âAs the nationâs most popular newspaper, The Sun is seen by about 7.5 million people every day, according to market data.
âMany have not chosen to view those images but they cannot be avoided whether they have been left lying around in cafĂ©s, on the bus or in the pub.
âThat means that children in particular are at risk of being exposed to Page 3.
âThese are a few examples of how Page 3 helps to normalise the objectification of womenâs bodies â and the consequences.
âA schoolgirl wrote to the Everyday Sexism project saying that the boys in her school hold up Page 3 in the corridor and mark the girls out of 10 as they walk past.
âA teacher who asked the class to bring in newspapers for art class had to explain why there was a naked woman in a so-called newspaper.
âA mother who took her six-year-old daughter to a cafĂ© for a treat and found Page 3 lying open on a table was asked, âMummy, why isnât that lady wearing a top?â
Outraged
âA father felt outraged that a man was looking at Page 3 while his three-and-a-half-year-old daughter was having a haircut.
âNone of those people buys The Sun and none wants to look at images of topless women in newspapers yet they had little choice.
âAs Lucy Holmes, founder of the wonderful No More Page 3 campaign, says: âWe are all affected by Page 3 whether we buy it or not because we all live in a society where the most widely read paper in the country makes ânormalâ the idea that women are there primarily for menâs sexual pleasure.â
âThe answer is not to âturn overâ, as the Prime Minister has suggested.
âTurning the page on inequality, prejudice, harassment and violence does not make it go away.
âNor is the fact that some Page 3 models say that they feel empowered by men looking at their bodies any justification because many more women are disempowered by the objectification of their and other womenâs bodies.
âLucy Holmes says that we âsee page after page of men doing all of this stuff, like running the country and achieving in sport, and then thereâs an image of a woman standing there in her pants.â
Worrying
âThe impact on young girlsâ self-image is especially worrying as has been recognised by Girlguiding.
âIt is supporting the No More Page 3 campaign with this message: âWe need to get used to the idea that women are not for sale.â
âIn common with the No More Page 3 campaign, I do not think that womenâs breasts are acceptable daily content for a family newspaper.
âFor that and a whole host of associated reasons, I join the campaign in calling on the paperâs editor to consign Page 3 to the rubbish bin where it belongs.
âTo date, public pressure has secured the most public sign from the proprietor of The Sun that the paper might scrap Page 3 but the clock is ticking and we still have not seen any concrete action so I think that if Page 3 still has not been removed from The Sun by the end of this year we should be asking the government to step in and legislate.
âThere are other areas where the government could act as well.
âThe National Federation of Retail Newsagents issued updated guidelines on displaying adult or top-shelf titles in December 2012.
âThe government could, as a small but important step, consider whether to make those guidelines mandatory rather than voluntary as at present.
Protected
âIt could also extend them to a wider range of publications to ensure that young women in particular are better protected from Page 3-type images.
âHonourable members may know that there are also currently moves to hold supermarkets and newsagents to account under equalities legislation for stocking publications that degrade women.
âI hope that the minister will look at that as well.
âWomenâs groups such as the End Violence Against Women coalition also argue that newspapers and magazines that are not age-restricted should always be suitable for wider audiences â in other words, audiences that include children and young people.
âThat means that all content, including advertising, must be suitable for children to consume if they choose to buy the publication or if they should come across it unawares.
âThe groups recommend that sexual material, such as images of nudity and/or language of a strong sexual nature that are not justified by the context, is not printed in newspapers or magazines that are not age-restricted.
âThose principles already exist for broadcast media and I am interested in what the minister thinks about introducing some consistency.
âCrucially, we also need the wider media culture to change.
Stronger
âWe could start by ensuring that the new editorsâ code of conduct, introduced in the wake of the Leveson inquiry, has a much stronger clause on the definition of discrimination in line with equalities legislation designed to protect people from violation and with the governmentâs international obligations on equality.
âPeople with expertise in equality should be an integral and permanent part of drawing up and overseeing implementation of the code.
âThat would help to deliver media that better reflect their audience.
âHalf of us are women, yet there is still a notable absence of women presenters and journalists.
âIt is the case that 72 per cent of Question Time contributors are men and 84 per cent of reporters and guests on Radio 4âs Today show are men.
âJust 18 per cent of presenters over 50 are women â that is evidence that women are battling against media ageism as well as sexism.
âIt is not just TV that is the problem. Researchers have found that from July 2011 to June 2012 women wrote less than one third of the articles in the Daily Mail, The Daily Telegraph and The Guardian and only 26 per cent of the opinion pages.
âOnly one national newspaper is edited by a woman and there has only ever been one instance of a woman editing a daily broadsheet newspaper in the UK.
âThat was 15 years ago when Rosie Boycott became editor of The Independent for just three months from January to April 1998.
Degrades
âWomen are fighting back with wonderful initiatives such as The Womenâs Room and HerSay to promote women experts on a range of topics yet, in a media culture that degrades women as standard, they are swimming against the tide.
âWe need media that feature women in all their diversity as well rather than media that inadequately reflect womenâs roles and contributions to society.
âYet that, too, is an uphill struggle when the industry is dominated by men.
âA Women in Journalism analysis of UK newspaper front pages from 2012 found that not only were more than three quarters of the stories written by men but that men also dominated the news stories themselves.
âOf all those quoted or mentioned by name in the lead stories, just 16 per cent were women.
âThe analysis also found significant differences in the roles that named men and women played in news stories.
âFor example, three quarters of so-called experts were men and 79 per cent of so-called victims were women.
âWomen are twice as likely to be quoted in their capacity as celebrities and 10 times as likely to be featured as victims when compared with men.
âIf it is true that a picture is worth a thousand words, the photos that make the front pages â not just Page 3 â of our newspapers also tell us a great deal about media sexism.
Analysis
âWomen in Journalismâs analysis further underscores how much men dominate the news agenda and examines the particular function that women fulfil for newspapers.
âAlthough there are generally strong news-related reasons for the appearance of most images of men on a sample of front pages, the same cannot necessarily be said for the women who feature.
âIt cites as an example the Middleton sisters, for whom âthe wearing of a new hat or new dress could be enough to prompt a lead front page picture, in a way that would be unlikely to be the case, say, if Prince William or Harry stepped out in a new tieâ.
âAn improved code of conduct needs to go hand in hand with ensuring that the proposed new regulatory bodies are fit for purpose.
âThat means that the post-Leveson regulatory frameworks need to institute and include a statutory body with proper womenâs representation on it and full rights for third parties and groups to complain about prejudicial treatment in the media.
âThat is essential if the press is to be held accountable through fair public scrutiny in line with its own press code.
âSexualised and sexist representations of women in the media provide a conducive context for violence against women and girls.
âIt is one in which such violence flourishes.
Commitment
âEarlier, I cited the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women.
âI welcome the fact that the government has this year joined other member states at the UN Commission on the Status of Women in making a formal commitment to act.
âIt has specifically promised to âpromote balanced and non-stereotypical portrayals of women with a view to eliminating discrimination against and the exploitation of women and girls and refraining from presenting them as inferior beings and exploiting them as sexual objects and commodities and instead present women and girls as creative human beings, key actors and contributors to and beneficiaries of the process of developmentâ.
âThat is a very worthy and positive objective and I look forward to hearing from the minister what practical action the government will be taking to that end to confront media sexism.
âI should also like to know whether he agrees with me that it is a sexist anachronism that The Sun is still available so widely across the Palace of Westminster estate and whether he will join me in taking action to try to get rid of it.
âI hope that the Minister will lend his full support to the measures that I have outlined today.
Ed Vaizey, the Minister for Culture, Communications and Creative Industries, said: âThis is an unusual and refreshing debate. I probably have to choose my language carefully.
Impact
âI am reluctant to praise the honourable member for Brighton Pavilion (Dr Lucas) on her dress sense, but she certainly made a fantastic impact in the initial stages of the debate.
âI note that you, Mr Hood, reminded us all of the current code of conduct for dress in the House, but she did make an impact.
âShe has also made an impact with a powerful speech.
âI note in passing the remarks the honourable lady made about the opening credits of BBC Parliament, which I confess is not a channel that I watch a great deal, but I know that the BBC monitors debates such as this extremely carefully.
âThe debate today is one of the few in which the BBC is mentioned when somebody from its public affairs department has not texted me furiously to put points on its behalf.
âI hope that the BBC has noted what the honourable lady said about the opening credits of BBC Parliament representing the cut and thrust of debate with 12 male members of the House and that it notes that there are many women members of the House who make a fantastic contribution to our debates.
âThe debate covers a crucial and wide-ranging issue, which impacts all of us in this country.
âI welcome the honourable ladyâs recent campaign and her ability to secure todayâs debate.
Principles
âIn responding to her remarks, I will describe some fundamental principles in the governmentâs approach to media regulation and, as she challenges me to do, provide a flavour of how we are addressing media sexism more generally.
âMedia representation of women is rightly of great concern to many people.
âAs discussed in the debate, it can include, in particular, images or text that are sexually explicit or objectifying, reporting that trivialises violence against women and girls, or accumulated imagery that restricts the diversity of representation of women.
âThe government fully recognise that concern, and the potential that such representations have to impact negatively on womenâs participation in public life as well as how they can affect the way women view themselves and how they might be viewed by others.
âIt is also worth reminding the House that the media play an invaluable role in our cultural and democratic life.
âThe government are utterly committed to supporting a vibrant and diverse media industry.
âThe press has a crucial role to play in our society: shining a light in dark places, holding the powerful to account and supporting vibrant local and regional communities.
Freedom
âFreedom of expression is a vital part of our society. As well as maintaining that freedom, we as a government are committed to maintaining media that command the respect of the public through high standards and are capable of appropriately protecting the rights of individuals.
âWhile on the one hand we must promote vibrant, diverse and free media, we must also maintain and protect the rights of ordinary people.
âThe focus of government regulation has therefore always been on supporting those standards and protecting individuals who find themselves, often through no fault of their own, the focus of the media.
âI will talk briefly about the different types of media regulation in this country, including press regulation, broadcasting regulation and advertising regulation.
âThe honourable lady spent some time on press regulation in her speech.
âIt is important to point out that newspapers are, of course, already bound by the law of the land, including the Obscene Publications Acts and the Indecent Displays Act 1989.
âThe Press Distribution Forum has published guidance on the display of adult material.
âThe majority of newspapers already sign up to the editorsâ code of practice, which the Press Complaints Commission is continuing to enforce until new arrangements are in place.
âAs the honourable lady pointed out, the Leveson inquiry considered the issues in detail.
Enforced
âAlthough the Leveson report concluded that the editorsâ code of practice is generally recognised to be sound, its central recommendations were about how the code could be more effectively enforced.
âAlthough it sets out a range of requirements around the treatment of individuals who become the subject of the news, it does not veer into the regulation of press content.
âThat is because content regulation is not something that we have applied to the press in this country, and on the whole, Leveson was clear that the distinction should continue.
âLeveson recommended a reformed system of self-regulation, including independence of appointments and funding, an arbitration service, a fast complaints-handling mechanism, and the power to demand apologies and levy fines.
âHe urged the press industry to work towards establishing a new, independent self-regulator to address those issues and suggested that press self-regulation should be independently verified through a process of recognition.
âAs the honourable lady pointed out, Lord Justice Leveson specifically examined evidence concerning media sexism, taking evidence from organisations such as Eaves, the End Violence Against Women coalition, Equality Now and Object, who jointly published a landmark report late last year entitled Just the Women.
âHe summarised thus: âThe evidence as a whole suggested that there is force in the trenchant views expressed by the groups and organisations who testified to the inquiry that the ⊠tabloid press often failed to show consistent respect for the dignity and equality of women generally and that there was a tendency to sexualise and demean women.â
âAmong other points, he concluded: âWhat is clearly required is that any such regulator has the power to take complaints from representative womenâs groups.â
âConsequently, his 11th recommendation was that a new self-regulator should enable third-party complaints, from, for example, representative womenâs groups, to help counteract media sexism, as well as other issues, and provide redress.
âThe government has considered the recommendation and it is now reflected in the cross-party charter that we published in March.
Appropriate
âHowever, we considered it appropriate to apply a threshold to the consideration of group complaints by the regulator to ensure that the future regulator was not inundated with complaints whose motive was to forward the campaigning agenda of a group or organisation and to make sure that complaints did not impact on the freedom of the press to express an opinion, which is a very important principle.
âTo summarise: the underlying principle of press regulation has always been that provided something remains within the law and so long as it does not inappropriately interfere with the rights of individuals, it is for adults to choose for themselves what they want to read.
âThe government therefore does not regulate and has no intention of regulating the content of the press itself.â
Dr Lucas said: âThe minister has talked a lot about how current press regulation means that the press are bound by the law of the land but the point I am making is that the law of the land does not go far enough.
âDoes he not agree that if Rupert Murdoch does not take steps himself and listen to the campaigners who are asking for Page 3 to be ditched, the government has a role and should step in at that point?
âThe existing law is not enough.â
Mr Vaizey said: âI hear what the honourable lady says and I know that she is campaigning for a change in the law but the governmentâs position is that we do not interfere in press content.
âThere are no plans to change the law in that regard.
âShe mentioned other points in her remarks which it is appropriate to address while I am on the subject of press content.
Effective
âThe honourable lady suggested that I meet her constituents when the results of her campaign have been collated. That would be an appropriate meeting.
âI would go further and suggest that other ministers involved in these issues also take part.
âShe mentioned the guidelines of the National Federation of Retail Newsagents.
âI take the approach that self-regulation can often be more effective than legislation because it is more flexible and can be updated more rapidly.
âI suggest that, with the NFRN, the government looks at how effectively the guidelines are being applied and that we maintain a dialogue with the NFRN, the honourable lady and campaigning groups on the guidelines.
âI do not have time to go into detail about broadcast media but it is important to point out that there is a difference between broadcast regulation and press regulation.
âBroadcasting is pushed into the home whereas it is often a matter of choice whether print media are brought into the home.
âThat is why the level of regulation is tighter for broadcasting.
Dr Lucas said: âPage 3 is not a matter of choice. It is everywhere â in shops, the tube and on buses.
âThat is why, in the last few seconds, I again invite him to take action with me to, at the very least, get it off the premises here in the House of Commons.â
Mr Vaizey said: âIf the honourable lady will forgive me, I am not planning to join her campaign to keep The Sun out of the Palace of Westminster.
âAs I said, it is a matter of choice whether people read The Sun and I do not think that campaign would be appropriate.
âI have only three seconds left, so I congratulate her on this effective debate.â










It takes a lot of courage to tackle this subject and really pleased Caroline Lucas is taking seriously the entrenched objectification of women and girls. I would like to see all of the MPs who have supported the No More Page 3 campaign to sit in Parliament with the exact same T shirt. I have felt really uncomfortable ever since I can remember when sitting on a bus or train and someone is looking at Page 3. Time it went – there’s plenty of work for girls who want to model topless in other more appropriate publications. I think when the cumulative bad done by something is this significant – and testimony from 100s of thousands is evidence it does – it is time for it to go.