Melissa Anderson
Founder of the Valleys Gymnastics Academy, which has grown from fewer than 100 members when it was founded in 2011 to almost 3,000 today. Ms Anderson, who is also an accredited sports coach, gives up more than 70 hours of her time every week to help get children, young people and adults involved in sport.
Christine Baker
Christine Baker works with offenders at HMP Usk and HMP Prescoed. She has worked at Careers Wales for 25 years and has been part of the prison programme for the majority of that time, helping individuals into sustainable employment opportunities and won the Career Development Institute Career Advisor of the Year award last year.
Rachael Barnes
Kellie Beirne
Programme director for the Cardiff Capital Region City Deal. In her role Ms Beirne is responsible for working with the 10 local authorities involved in the scheme to make sure projects are delivered.
Jayne Bryant
The Labour MS for Newport West was elected to succeed Dame Rosemary Butler in 2016. She previously worked for late Newport West MP Paul Flynn and chairs the Assembly’s Standards of Conduct Committee.
Dame Rosemary Butler
Served as AM/MS for Newport West from the foundation of the Welsh Assembly in 1999 until 2016, when she retired. She was also the Assembly’s presiding officer from 2011 until her retirement. She was made a Dame in the 2014 New Year Honours for political and public services, particularly to women.
Abigail Chamberlain
Originally from Magor and now living in Chepstow, Ms Chamberlain dropped out of university aged 18 and set up her own business aged 20, which has been going from strength to strength.
Kelly Davies
A weapon engineer for 12 years in the Royal Navy while running her own beauty business and who is currently a lecturer in engineering at Crosskeys College. She recently spoke at the Torfaen Women in Business Event to celebrate the contribution women make to the business community.
Nicole Garnon
The first-ever - and so far only - female editor of the South Wales Argus. She first began working at the Argus as a trainee in 1987 before leaving to spend a short time with the Western Mail. Nicole returned in 1989 to be the paper’s health reporter, a role she held for several years before moving on to the newsdesk as deputy editor before stepping into the editor’s chair in October 2016. She left the role last year.
Jane Grayer
Has worked as a celebrant in Abergavenny for the past five years, which means she creates and conducts all kinds of ceremonies including weddings, namings, and funerals.
The lack of willingness to normalise death as a conversation is one of the reasons she set up Abergavenny Death Café in 2018.
The Death Café is an international movement to start the conversation around death and dying.
Becky James
Cyclist from Abergavenny, who won two silver medals at the 2016 Rio Olympics. She started her career at the Abergavenny Road Club and represented Wales at the 2010 Commonwealth Games, where she won a silver and a bronze medal. She retired in August 2017 to begin a baking business.
Kamila Jarczak
Delyth Jewell
Plaid Cymru MS for South Wales East, appointed following the death of Steffan Lewis in January 2019. She previously worked for Citizens Advice and the charity ActionAid on issues relating to women’s rights and international development.
Caroline Johnson
Caroline Johnson, founder of the Eden Gate charity since 1990. She was also instrumental in setting up the Newport Night Shelter project in 2008 until both were combined into Eden Gate in 2013. Now of charity Amazing Grace Spaces, which has been running a project offering homeless people emergency accommodation in small pods.
Liz Johnson
Has won medals at three consecutive Paralympic Games, winning silver on debut in the 100m breaststroke at Athens in 2004, gold in the 100m breaststroke in Beijing and bronze in the 100m backstroke at London. Ms Johnson, who is from Newport, won four golds and three bronzes at the IPC World Championships in Durban (2006) and Rio (2009). She announced her retirement through injury in 2016.
Laura Anne Jones
Previously served as Conservative MS for South Wales East between 2003 and 2007, in June last year she returned to the role following the death of predecessor Mohammad Asghar. She also serves on Monmouthshire County Council.
Pam Kelly
Appointed chief constable of Gwent Police in August 2019. She began her policing career as a volunteer with the Special Constabulary before joining Dyfyd-Powys Police in 1994. Ms Kelly joined Gwent Police as deputy chief constable in 2017.
Professor Julie Lydon
Vice-chancellor of the University of South Wales. In 2014 she was awarded an OBE for services to higher education in Wales.
Cllr Philippa Marsden
Leader of Caerphilly County Borough Council since November 2019, she is the authority's first female leader.
Janet Martin
Kate Mercer and Sarah Goodey
The Labour MP was first elected for Newport East in 2005 – the first woman to be elected as an MP in south-east Wales. Former general secretary of Welsh Labour, she was key in organising several of the campaigns in the 1997 General Election.
Jane Mudd
Appointed as Newport council’s new leader in November 2019, previously a Malpas ward councillor and previously served as cabinet member for regeneration and housing.
Heather Myers
Director of the South Wales Chamber of Commerce and former chief executive of the Abergavenny Food Festival.
Lynne Neagle
Labour MS for Torfaen, she is one of only a small handful of Senedd Members elected when the Welsh Parliament - then the Welsh Assembly - was founded in 1999 to still be sitting.
Tegan Nox
Bargoed wrestler Steffanie Newell, known by the ring name Tegan Nox, has battled back from two potentially career-ending knee injuries between 2017 and 2019 to continue performing at the highest level - WWE. She is currently performing on NXT and NXT:UK brands.
Judith Paget
Chief executive of the Aneurin Bevan University Health Board. Has worked for the NHS since 1980 and joined the board in 2009 and was appointed chief executive in 2014.
Rhianon Passmore
Labour MS for Islwyn since 2016, she also previously served on Caerphilly County Borough Council.
Hayley Parsons
Founder of price comparison website GoCompare. Born and raised in Cwmbran, she worked for Admiral Group, where she also helped launched price comparison site confused.com, before leaving in 2016 to create GoCompare. She is a key figure in the BeTheSpark movement, which promotes entrepeurship in Wales. In 2012 she received an OBE in the New Year’s Honours list for services to the economy.
Alexandria Riley
Emma Saysell
Chief executive of St David's Hospice Care. She joined the charity in 1994 as a clinical nurse specialist, and was appointed chief executive in 2004. From Chepstow, she was awarded an MBE for services to voluntary sector health provision in Newport in 2014.
Beth Sims
Laura Tenison
Founder and owner of national children's clothing and maternity wear chain JoJo Maman Bébé, which is based in Newport. The company was founded as mail order catalogue in 1993 and has gone from strength-to-strength, with stores across the UK and in the USA. Ms Tenison has also worked with charities bringing healthcare, education, clean water and clothes, to communities in Mozambique and Lebanon. In 2003 she was awarded an MBE in the Queen’s New Year Honours List for services to business.
June Thomas
June Thomas BEM
After her son Jack died suddenly at 15-years-old, she established a Valleys branch of the UK charity Cardiac Risk in the Young (CRY) as well as Jack's Appeal, a campaign to get all secondary schools in Gwent fitted with a defibrillator. In 2017 Ms Thomas, from Oakdale, was presented with a British Empire Medal for her work.
Alison Ward
Chief executive of Torfaen County Borough Council, she started her career as a solicitor and later worked for Neath Port Talbot Council before moving to Torfaen Council in 2002. She was made chief executive two years later. Ms Ward has also mentored young women in the public sector management positions. In 2011 she was awarded a CBE in the New Years Honours list for services to local government.
Baroness Debbie Wilcox
A former school teacher who was first elected as Labour AM for the Gaer on Newport City Council in 2004. She was made the council's leader in May 2016, and later leader of the Welsh Local Government Association - the first woman to serve in either of these roles. She stepped down last year when she was appointed to the House of Lords in Theresa May's resignation honours.
Amy Williams
Rachel Williams
Shereen Williams
A community activist, who aftter 10 years in the role left local government at the end of 2018 to take up the post of Chief Executive of the Local Democracy and Boundary Commission for Wales - the only woman of colour heading up a Welsh Government Sponsored Body.
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