Liberia’s Gender Quota Push: Progress in Cabinet but Legislative Hurdles Remain Ahead of 2029 Elections

Liberia: Gains and Setbacks for Women in New Government As Women Renew Push for Gender Quota Law Before 2029 Elections

Historic Cabinet Representation, But Legislative Progress Lags

MONROVIA, Liberia—President Joseph Boakai marked a milestone in his January State of the Nation Address, announcing that 39% of his cabinet ministers (7 out of 19) are women—the highest ratio in Liberia’s history. While advocates celebrated this achievement in executive appointments, concerns remain about women’s declining representation in the Legislature.

Liberia women in parliament statistics
Source: World Bank data on women’s political representation in Liberia

Rosana Schaack, former River Cess County representative, warned: “The real seat of power in Liberia remains out of reach for women.” Recent elections saw women win just 10.7% of legislative seats—lower than 20 years ago and far below the 27% sub-Saharan African average.

The Legislature: Where Real Change Happens

Atty Mmonbeydo Joah of the Organization for Women and Children emphasized: “The Legislature is where decisions affecting women’s lives are made. With equal representation, Liberia would benefit from both men’s and women’s perspectives.”

This paradox—strong executive representation but weak legislative presence—dates back to Ellen Johnson Sirleaf’s presidency (2006-2018). Though Africa’s first elected female president appointed women to 28% of cabinet posts, legislative gains didn’t follow.

President Sirleaf meets Hillary Clinton
President Sirleaf with then-U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton

Failed Quota Law and the Sierra Leone Example

Liberia’s struggle contrasts with regional progress. Rwanda leads Africa with 61.3% women in parliament, while Sierra Leone jumped to 28% after passing its 2022 Gender Empowerment Act. Liberia’s similar 2022 bill—which would have mandated 30% female candidates—failed under disputed circumstances.

Charlyne Brumskine, former vice-presidential candidate, urged President Boakai to prioritize passing the quota law: “We need at least 40% female participation in elected and appointed positions for national progress.”

Cllr. Brumskine campaigning
Cllr. Brumskine on the 2023 campaign trail

Financial and Psychological Barriers

Campaign costs present major obstacles:

  • $2,500 filing fee for independent presidential candidates
  • $10,000 minimum bank balance requirement
  • Average annual income near $500

Victoria Koiquah, who won 50,000 votes in Montserrado County’s 2023 senatorial race, described the financial challenges: “Sometimes women complete all processes but can’t afford poll watchers.”

Victoria Koiquah campaigning
Victoria Koiquah, former senatorial candidate

Building Support Systems

Organizations are addressing these challenges through:

  • Leadership training programs
  • Legal support against political violence
  • Mentorship initiatives

The Liberty Party recently achieved 50% female leadership. Chairperson Rugie Barry pledged: “We’ll continue championing policies that uplift women, as national progress depends on women’s progress.”

As Brumskine noted: “Nobody’s coming to save us. We must find innovative ways to overcome these challenges together.”

This story was produced in collaboration with New Narratives through the “Investigating Liberia” project, with funding from the Swedish Embassy. The funder had no editorial influence.

Read the original report at FrontPageAfrica

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