Violence against women a top concern for nearly nine in ten Britons, new report finds

WorldPolitics
25 Mar 2026 • 8:18 AM MYT
The Independent
The Independent

The world’s most free-thinking newspaper

image is not available

Almost nine in ten Britons say they are concerned about violence against women and girls, a new report has found, piling pressure on the government to move more quickly to tackle the issue.

The report, being published by the Health Equality Foundation on Wednesday, warned that “decades of underinvestment and inattention have eroded women’s trust”, meaning that the “systems designed to respond to [VAWG]” are failing.

A poll conducted as part of the report, seen by The Independent, reveals that around nine in 10 adults (88 per cent) say they are concerned about VAWG – placing it only slightly behind the NHS (91 per cent) and the cost of living (93 per cent).

Notably, this is well ahead of immigration on 77 per cent, and unemployment on 72 per cent.

The government has put a mission to tackle immigration at the centre of its agenda, forming a key part of Labour’s plan to win back votes from Reform UK amid devastating approval ratings.

While Labour has also pledged to halve violence against women and girls in a decade – a plan which was unveiled in December in its long delayed VAWG strategy – this has been a much less prominent mission than Sir Keir Starmer’s attempt to crack down on migration.

Health Equality Foundation founder Baroness Nargund, a Labour peer, told The Independent that while the government has “made meaningful progress placing women’s concerns at the heart of its agenda”, she urged ministers to implement policies that put women’s safety and wellbeing at the forefront “without delay”.

The survey also reveals that over the past 12 months alone, almost half (44 per cent) of women have avoided a place, route or situation because they felt unsafe, compared with 26 per cent of men.

Baroness Nargund told The Independent: “Concern about violence against women and girls now sits alongside the NHS and the cost of living” as one of Britain’s top worries.

“That is not an abstract anxiety – it is about women feeling unsafe on their streets, on public transport and even in their own homes.

image is not available

“The government has made meaningful progress placing women’s concerns at the heart of its agenda, much more than its predecessors.

“Its VAWG strategy, the renewal of the Women’s Health Strategy, and the expansion of funded childcare are all welcome and important steps in the right direction.”

She added: “The priority now is delivery. It is imperative that policies that put women’s safety and wellbeing at the forefront are implemented without delay. If women can see and feel that change in their everyday lives over the next year, then trust can be rebuilt.”

The polling – conducted by GGF Insights between March 13 and 17 – spoke to 4,007 nationally representative British adults.

A Home Office spokesperson said: “Violence against women and girls is a national emergency, and this government is deploying the full power of the state to halve it within a decade.

“Our Freedom from Violence and Abuse strategy sets out clear actions to prevent abuse, pursue offenders, and support victims, underpinning our commitment to cut VAWG by 50 per cent.

“We are investing over £1bn in victim support over the next three years, ensuring schools tackle the root causes of violence through teaching healthy relationships and consent, and strengthening policing by embedding public protection as a dedicated specialism.”

This article was amended on 1 May 2026. The headline originally said that ‘Britons are more concerned about violence against women and girls (VAWG) than they are about immigration,’ but that was inaccurate. The polling did not ask them whether they were more or less concerned about these issues, just whether or not they were concerned.

Read More

Online violence and deepfakes push women out of work, survey finds