Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Rishi Sunak served as Prime Minister from 2022 to 2024. These are lists of people who belong to non-European ethnic minorities and have been elected as Members of the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, European Parliament, and other British devolved bodies, as well as members of the non-elected House of Lords.
This was the first time that someone from an ethnic minority had been succeeded in one of the Great Offices of State by another person from that category. [15] First South Asian Member of the Welsh Assembly. Mohammad 'Oscar' Asghar, Conservative AM for South Wales East 2007–20 [16] First South Asian Member of the Scottish Parliament
He is a television presenter on political and Islamic programmes on Islam Channel and Channel S. [45] Ali Shahalom – Comedian who hosts his own YouTube channel called Aliofficial1 with comedy sketches. [46] Since 2014, he has hosted The Variety Show on Channel S. Fazle Lohani – Journalist, writer, television presenter and filmmaker.
Party Portrait Name First office held Year appointed Ethnicity Conservative: Nosheena Mobarik, Baroness Mobarik [12]: Baroness-in-waiting: 2016 British Pakistani
A proposal for Longitudinal Study of Ethnic Minorities (LSEM) was suggested by sociologist James Nazroo to create designated ethnic groups under Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi, Caribbean and Black African. [23] The LSEM understood the constraints of the oversampling of groups and refined the methods of categorising the ethnic minorities.
This is a subcategory of Category:Black British people by occupation and includes those elected or appointed to political office, trade unionists and rights campaigners. Subcategories This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total.
The voting age has already been lowered to include 16- and 17-year-olds for both Senedd elections [57] and local elections in Wales since 2020, [58] but not for UK general elections or police and crime commissioner elections: 18 is the minimum voting age for both of these. [58] Plaid Cymru supports making social care "free at the point of need".
Irish Free State (within Commonwealth to 1948 – subsequently seceded as the Republic of Ireland): W. T. Cosgrave , President of the Executive Council (1922–32), had been MP for Kilkenny City in 1917–18 and for North Kilkenny 1918–22 but he did not sit at Westminster because of the Sinn Féin policy of abstentionism .