Morocco is ranked 102nd worldwide in women’s participation in legislators

Morocco is ranked 102nd worldwide by 95 MPs who control 24.3 percent of the total number of parliamentary seats.
It came into the recent update of the statistical data of “IPU”, which is usually subject to monthly resurrection based on the results of the periodic uniquely organized assembly elections.
Based on the results of the September 2021 elections, the Morocco resolve in the above rankings, which has seen significant growth in the number of MPs who did not exceed 81 MPs in the Tenth Legislative Assembly (between 2016 and 2021).
The arrangement, which includes up to 183 countries of the world, depends on the data provided by the first parliamentary rooms or their similar companies, and its members are directly elected, so that countries are compared to the percentage of feminist components within these institutions, based on the percentage of men.
According to the July 2024 elections, Cuba finished third with 55.7 per cent and Nicaragua 55 per cent.
The first European origin registered the first European origin, because it came into the fifth rankings, with 46 percent of parliamentary women in the ninth ranking of Iceland, followed by Monaco and Finland in tenth and eleven teams respectively.
African countries have been ranked in advanced teams including Cape Verte, South Africa, Ethiopia and Senegal, Namibia and Mozambique, which violated 38 percent of women’s integration into its selected legislature.
In the midst of the aforementioned arrangement, other European countries appeared because France finished 42nd in 208 MPs, followed by Austria, Albania, Germany and Luxembourg, and later Portugal. As for the United States, it ranked 77th worldwide and women were added to 28.9 percent.
Despite the 102nd rankings, Morocco is higher in the percentage of women who are directly involved to hold positions within the Legislative Assembly (Parliamentary Representation), as it continued to be the highest in Morocco, as Turkey, Slovakia, Moritenia, Arajarbaijan, Saudi Arabia and Jordan (…).
As for Algeria, it came into the countries of the last quarter of the classification, because it is ranked 172nd, and the women’s coordination rate does not exceed 7.9 percent, causing the majority of the Algerian parliamentary areas to be controlled by men.
Before we learned its beginning in 1993, it should be noted that the number of women within the Morocco parliament was normal for the decades that followed the independence of the country. The representative of the women’s representative benefited more than the gains of the 2011 Constitution, which contributed to the increase of the number of women in the congregation of the guards in the first three assembly elections.