Women and government in Australia
Government in Australia is elected by universal suffrage and Australian women participate in all levels of the government of the nation. In 1902, the newly formed Commonwealth of Australia became the first nation on earth to enact equal suffrage, enabling women to both vote and stand for election alongside men Women have been represented in Australian state parliaments since 1921, and in the Federal Parliament since 1943. The first female leader of an Australian State or Territory was elected in 1989, and the first female Prime Minister took office in 2010. In 2019 for the first time, a majority of members of the Australian Senate were women. At the time of its foundation in 1901, and again from 1952 to 2022, Australia has had a female monarch as ceremonial Head of State, while the first female Governor of an Australian State was appointed in 1991, and the first female Governor-General of Australia took office in 2008.
Queen Elizabeth II with her first Australian Prime Minister, Sir Robert Menzies in 1954
Governor-General Quentin Bryce (right) stands with Prime Minister Julia Gillard – the first women to hold these respective offices in Australian history,
South Australian suffragette Catherine Helen Spence (1825–1910). Australia's first female political candidate.
Womanhood Suffrage League of New South Wales, 1902
Henrietta Augusta Dugdale was a pioneer Australian who initiated the first women's suffrage society in Australia. Non-conformist, provocative and quick-witted, her campaigning resulted in breakthroughs for women's rights in Australia.
Henrietta Dugdale c. 1845