When Britain Let Women Actually Rule

By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — June 15, 2026

🎯 Say it plainly: sexism mattered. Twice.
A lot of voters would rather risk authoritarianism than accept a woman in power.
That bias didn’t disappear — it just hid behind “other reasons.”

Britain’s history offers a useful contrast to American anxiety about female leadership. When women ruled in Britain, the debate was rarely about whether they should hold power. It was about what they did with it.

In the sixteenth century, Elizabeth I governed a divided kingdom facing religious conflict and foreign threat. She consolidated authority, stabilized the state, and kept England intact during a period when missteps could have been fatal. Her reign is remembered not as an experiment, but as a consolidation of power.

Two centuries later, Queen Victoria presided over an era of industrial expansion and global influence that reshaped Britain’s role in the world. Whatever one thinks of imperial outcomes, the fact remains that her gender was not treated as a governing liability. The machinery of the state functioned.

In modern times, Britain elected Margaret Thatcher as prime minister. She remains controversial, often intensely so. But controversy is not incapacity. Thatcher demonstrated—beyond dispute—that a woman could wield executive power in a modern parliamentary system, survive sustained political conflict, and impose a governing agenda.

The British reminder is simple and uncomfortable: female authority was normalized long before it was perfected. Policy arguments came first. Identity arguments came second, if at all.

The United States has inverted that order. American political discourse obsessively interrogates temperament, likability, tone, and “electability,” as though these were neutral concerns rather than inherited anxieties. The language has evolved. The hesitation has not.

When voters claim they are worried about viability rather than gender, Britain’s record calls that claim into question. Societies that trust women with power tend to argue openly about policy. Societies that do not invent procedural doubts and treat them as prudence.

This is not a matter of tradition or constitutional structure. It is a matter of cultural comfort. Britain crossed that line long ago. The United States still circles it, insisting the problem lies somewhere else.

For more social commentary, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

This essay will be archived as part of the ongoing WPS News Monthly Brief Series available through Amazon.

References

Encyclopaedia Britannica. (n.d.). Elizabeth I. Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Encyclopaedia Britannica. (n.d.). Victoria. Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Encyclopaedia Britannica. (n.d.). Margaret Thatcher. Encyclopaedia Britannica.

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