
91. Lady Megan Lloyd George
Leaders (56 votes)
1902 – 1966
Wales’ first woman M.P who served for thirty years at Westminster.
In the eight decades since women were given the vote and allowed to stand for parliament, Wales has elected only six women MPs. Megan Lloyd George was not only the first of them- she also remains the longest serving and the only one to become Deputy Leader of her party.
As the daughter of the former Prime Minister and the dominant figure in Welsh politics, her selection to fight the then safe Liberal seat of Anglesey in 1929 was a matter of some controversy. Megan’s brother Gwilym was already an M.P and it seemed to some that David Lloyd George was intent on creating his own dynastic power base.
Suggestions of nepotism faded as Megan began a parliamentary career that, despite a lengthy interruption in the 1950’s, would span thirty years. Although the declining fortunes of the Liberals would keep her out of high office- the last Liberal government was that of her father- she nevertheless became Deputy Leader of the party and a prominent political personality in her own right.
Welsh issues were never far from the top of her agenda. She was the founding president of the ‘Parliament for Wales’ campaign – an early attempt to secure devolved government. Later she was prominent in the Treweryn Defence Committee – the body formed to resist the controversial flooding of a village near Bala to provide water for English consumers.
Such campaigns led to significant concessions to Welsh interests both in parliament and in the apparatus of government. In 1944 Megan Lloyd George opened the first ever ‘Welsh Day’ debate at Westminster. Later she was also prominent among those who pushed for the creation of the Welsh Office and the post of Secretary of State for Wales in the early 1960’s.
By then however she had changed political parties. Defeated on Anglesey by Cledwyn Hughes in 1951, she defected to the Labour cause soon afterwards – one of several prominent figures to do so.
She returned to parliament in 1957 after winning Carmarthen for Labour and remained an MP until her death nine years later.
