Recently, debates about policies have disappeared under an avalanche of s-xist, misogynist nonsense and the commentary on it. Please note, I continue to oppose the abhorrent gender-based attacks on the Prime Minister, but see these as separate from the policy stuff. So let’s shift the focus back on what is done or on offer.
Yes, Julia Gillard, your policies and party do earn more brownie points on a feminist scorecard than the Coalition based on what is on offer, but not because the ALP is the clear champion of women’s progress. There are deficits on the ALP side. No, Tony Abbott, your lot don’t make much impact, despite your conversion on parental leave, as there are too many other negatives. In sum, neither of you have really scored well enough to lock in loyalty from women. Both of you could try harder. Here’s why …
Retirement income: Abbott, your promise to remove the low-income super rebate is a very unkind cut to low-income earners, who have been overtaxed for years at the flat 15%. Gillard, you score a point for putting this in place, but it will make only a little difference to existing gross gender inequities, as the current super tax concessions go to high-income earners — mostly men. The rise in compulsory contributions to 12% will not fix the inequities for those low-income earners.
Equal pay: Gillard, the win by the poorly paid workers covered by the Australian Services Union was good news because the gender pay gap continues to be too high, but the problem continues. The extra cash on offer for childcare and aged-care workers is short term and doesn’t solve the basic problem of undervalued feminised skills. Abbott, you haven’t been supportive on this issue, which is about both fair pay and improving services for vulnerable people.
Paid parental leave: Abbott, you actually get the point that this is a workplace payment so must relate to individual pay rates, but it needs to be delivered — but not funded — by employers to reinforce the connection. Gillard, this is not a welfare payment, so your single, flat rate undermines the workplace entitlement connection. The rate can be pro rata or capped but should be adjusted to cover most women’s pay.
Women in Parliament: The ALP scores better on this, but the PM loses a mark for backing Senator David Feeney over the Emily’s List candidate, Mary-Anne Thomas, for preselection in the very safe federal seat of Batman. There is also the clumsy dumping of NT Senator Trish Crossin, which doesn’t encourage new female members of the Labor Party. The Coalition is losing a good feminist in Judi Moylan and needs to work much harder on increasing the number of women MPs.
Single parents: Single parents were dumped onto a lower payment and coerced into often-futile job seeking. The prestigious HILDA survey last week showed clearly the 2006 Howard Welfare to Work reductions of eligibility for the Parenting Payment had made sole parents poorer by 2010. If they have jobs, they are often low paid and casual; if not, parents are often left long-term on a payment too low to live on. The ALP has added to single parents’ misery by its decision to retain the cuts and now put another 63,000+ exempted sole parents into this poverty trap. This policy change is inexcusable as there is no evidence that it increases income or access to paid work.
The above change is particularly damaging as it ignores the time and demands of these people’s primary parenting role. The similar policies of the major parties suggest that neither understands or respects non-economic contributions, mostly made by women via unpaid care. Both parties claim feminism as the basis for their focus on increasing women’s participation in paid work but do not understand that coercing mothers into jobs undermines the process of re-valuing social as well as economic contributions.
So far, the verdict is for both parties: could do better, so we need to keep up the pressure for more good gender-fair policies. The Coalition has only one point of better policy, so Abbott much more ground to make up.
why dpn’t you, and others compare the ALP and Libs feminist score card with Australian Greens policies. There is a third party batting at a voting average close to ALP’s in this election. Real choice, the two biggER parties don’t have a monopoly on democracy, although the’d like us to think so!
I must be missing something, but I cannot see why a paid parental scheme, funded by the government should be connected to a persons pay. Another example of middle class welfare. If it is to be funded by the government surely the ability of a person to save before having a baby should reduce the ‘obligation’ of the government.
Eva Cox has again failed women by stating that the Emily’s List female candidate should get preference over the male candidate, even though he is backed by Julia Gillard and most others.
Put bluntly Feeney is by far the better candidate, highly experienced and capable. He is ministerial material (though maybe some way off for other reasons). Sadly the female candidate is not the best woman for the job and is certainly not as effective as Feeney.
I fully support more women in Parliament, but let’s get the best woman aboard, not just because they are of the feminine sex. BTW where was Emily’s List when they selected a time server to Harry Jenkins old seat?
I can see what Eva is talking about here, in terms of targets for improving certain conditions for women across broad areas of society, but it is often the case that educated women of the upper classes don’t really at all understand what a wide range of women struggle with on a daily and weekly basis. These feminists have their sights set on certain agendas and that’s great for the small group of women that benefit from such objective (like wealthier working women with the money, education and social status/capital for participating in politics). But the problem is that many women do not at all identify with feminists and do not benefit at all by modern-day feminist interests…
One example is that sure men will retire on more money and sure a lot of women only work part-time or casual…but married women are actually in the best economic and social situation than men or sinlge women, or single parents…if the man retires doesn’t his wife enjoy that money? And if he dies she will get that money in the will and live comfortably. Women with fulltime working husbands get all the material, economic and social privileges of their husband’s economic activity such as holidays, more assets like extra cars/new cars, holiday houses, private health insurance, healthiest food options and gym memberships because even though she might only work parttime or casually, she gets a share of the husband’s assets/wealth. So surely out of all these “hard up” women a large portion of them actually do really well out of marriage.
How about the age-old and not-yet-solved problem of domestic violence – Eva – where are the feminists on this topic? Or the poverty and vulnerability of women who escape domestic violence? We witnessed just yesterday the impotent gesture of very wealthy leaders of business living in a giant shed to pretend they give a damn about homeless people (and remember that many women who escape DV end up homeless and at the mercy of Centrelink) but they provide not a single scrap of practical help, systemic assistance, financial support…this is a social problem but business leaders are only experts at private profit for wealthy people…can everyone make something out of nothing???
Where are the politicians when there are multiple events of violence on multiple nights in the news…from violence in sport to violence directed at a celebrity chef to rapes of career rapists or adored football stars…where are the female politicians then? Where are the feminists then?
Answer: nowhere important to the issue…arguing over cake when thousands have no bread…
Oh and I forgot the plight of other groups who happen to be female like Indigenous women in remote Oz, women seeking asylum, women who are gay and wanting to get married, women in rural areas whose livelihoods are buggered by economic globalisation, or all the women graduating universities with no jobs because our governments cannot control trade enough to keep jobs in our own country, or even addressing the poor role models of unrealisic body images all over our culture industries that brainwash our girls into believing you have to revolve your entire life around the amount of fat tissue on your body…