Labor women’s group EMILY’s List will double down in its bid to hold on to the female vote after the dumping of Julia Gillard, as Labor strategists look to cover all bases to steal victory from under Tony Abbott’s nose on election day.
Over her three years in office, Australia’s first female prime minister consistently achieved a higher ‘better PM’ rating among women than the opposition leader, whose track record on feminist issues formed a key part of the Gillard communication team’s political thrust. A resurgent Kevin Rudd will be hoping to sandbag that sentiment as the ALP’s national apparatus shifts to a pre-election war footing.
The move comes in the aftermath of the short-lived “Women for Gillard” initiative, launched in the dying days of Gillard’s government but slammed by some internal activists as window dressing compared to the main game of enlivening the party’s deep internal architecture fomented over decades.
EMILY’s List national co-convener Tanja Kovac says her group will soon conduct exclusive polling in marginal seats in the lead-up to election day, “of women, by women, for women — to assess public policy from a women’s perspective, making recommendations to the ALP about how to win the women’s vote”. In previous years the data has proven crucial in gauging which policies are likely to hit home.
Kovac told Crikey that “winning the women’s vote — which is what gender-based campaigning is all about — is an important aspect of any political campaign strategy. It is entirely foolish politics to ignore the policy and campaigning needs of 52% of the population.”
Abbott has consistently polled lower among women than men and Labor believes he remains vulnerable to a renewed assault on his gender credibility. The parliamentary leadership team is looking to install a women in Gillard’s seat of Lalor to counter the raft of men contesting preselection in newly vacated safe Labor seats and help resuscitate state-based affirmative action policies.
“Women for Gillard”, launched just four weeks ago, lampooned “men in blue ties” and re-raised the rolling issue of abortion in Australian life. It was headed by South Australian Labor identity and Canberra staffer Clarabella Burley and chaired by Chloe Bryce, the wife of Bill Shorten and daughter of Governor General Quentin Bryce. Burley’s Twitter account advises she remains a director of Women for Gillard precursor Women for Progress.
Gillard communications director John McTernan, who helped setup the group, penned a swingeing op-ed for the UK Telegraph two days after his boss’ sacking, claiming she was felled by a brutal culture of misogyny.
“When a speech launching a women’s group supporting a female Labor prime minister is rejected by EMILY’s List, it’s pretty obvious somebody screwed up terribly.”
Rudd-supporting MPs, led by Stephen Jones and Ed Husic, had expressed surprise at the tactic. That was followed by a number of Labor Right-aligned women staffers, who made their feelings known in exclusive briefings provided to Crikey anonymously because their senior roles in Labor circles mean they are not authorised to speak on the matter. They said the initiative, had it been allowed to play out, would have led to a net political gain for the Coalition.
“Whatever your views on abortion it was blatantly clear that if you are the sort of man who has ever had the audacity to wear a suit, and match that suit with a blue tie, you were not welcome to vote Labor,” said one. And another: “In one fell swoop Tony Abbott was portrayed as an ordinary Australian, just like everyone else, united with nearly every other male in the country in being discouraged to support Labor. The PMO had achieved the opposite to what they were supposed to do.
“The polling crashed after Gillard’s ‘blue ties’ speech. Less well-documented is the fact that even the pro-choice women’s Labor group EMILY’S List was dismayed by the antics of Women for Gillard. When a speech launching a women’s group supporting a female Labor prime minister is rejected by EMILY’s List, it’s pretty obvious somebody screwed up terribly.”
Amanda Tattersall — a GetUp! and Sydney Alliance director and author of activism bible Power in Coalition — agrees a “sincere movement to combat s-xism is going to take more than five minutes and a new website. If you want to build a movement in any political party you’ve got to actually organise rather than send a few emails,” she said.
Kovac told Crikey that inauthentic appeals to women don’t hold up: “If your political appeal to women is not backed up with a history of achievement and commitment to the values of equality, reproductive rights and alleviating the work-life juggle struggle, then there will be a disconnect with women voters.
“This is why there is a long-term trend of poor polling with women for Opposition Leader Abbott. Despite many attempts by his minders to reimagine him as a SNAG, his historic undermining of gender equality makes these appeals seem superficial and unbelievable. If gender campaigning is not authentic, not built for and by women themselves, women won’t buy it.
“Progressives in the US, UK and Australia are only beginning to understand how to bring women and the issues that matter to them into the centre of campaigning.”
Lets all focus on the alleged fraud AWU fraud while Gillard is still a member of Labor. After all if there is any substance to the reason why Michael Smith news items are not being covered by the main stream media. Edward James
Has the urban ape mans wife left him or not? there is a lot of talk that his daughters are supporting him but his missus is missing?
Lets all focus on the facts surrounding his travel rorts and his assault of a female when he was in university. A bit more relevance.
Edward James, not sure what your comment has to do with the above, but if you are so worried about alleged fraud then where is your concern over Abbott using taxpayers money to promote his book and only paying it back when it was bought to his attention? Or the alleged role of some Liberal frontbenchers in the Peter Slipper affair?? That is far more recent and more relevant.
Getting back to the above article – for me, Gillard lost all credibility on ‘women’s issues’ when her government decided to move single parents, who are mostly women, onto Newstart.
Exactly SusieQ—forcing single parents (mostly women) onto Newstart is the biggest act of misogyny (that’s right committed by women)…I also don’t understand the concept of campaigning for women—the fact that another group of people share the same body parts does not mean they share the same values! During my time of struggle, some of my primary supporters were men!
I am dismayed at the strange young women. Chloe Bryce is the daughter of the first female GG, why would she claim that the sexism is rife in Australia when it was Rudd who appointed her mother to be head of state?
And her mother is the representative of the same Head of State this nation has had for 60 years who happens to be a woman.
I think the GEn X girls are lost and floundering because they have never had to wage a tough fight to anything, we old broads waged the wars for them and handed it to them on plates.
Here is a tip GEn X girls. When we fought for equality we did it for equality, not to be whiney little girls when we don’t get our own way.
I had a rather novel way of dealing with sexism whem I was 14 and had a Mia Farrow haircut, I was called a lesbian (it was 1967) so I cut it shorter. Most girls in my town had short hair within a year because it was just so damn hot to have long hair.
IN 1968 when I liked the mini I was called a slut, so I cut it shorter.
That is the only way to defy bullies.
Today’s young women don’t have a clue.
And Serena, it was another ALP woman in 1986 who slashed payments to single parents who wanted to study and even told me if I got a man I would get the full allowance.
All but two of the women in parliament voted to shove refugee kids in prisons for years on end, to deport them to Manus Island and to strip them of all family rights.
All but 2 men did the same.
All those family lovers voted to torture other families to win the racist votes to be garnered in WEstern Sydney.
I think Western Sydney must be hell on earth if all they can whinge about is kicking around refugee families.
All the mothers, all the fathers, the aunts, the uncles, the nephews and grand parents and nieces but 4 in our parliament voted to torture children.
Think about those values.