The past few years have been troubling times for women leaders in the West. Although they have made important gains in top and visible leadership roles — culminating in Australia with our first female prime minister, Julia Gillard, in 2010 — some of the problems identified by our first female elected representative, Edith Cowan, in the 1920s, continue to rear their heads.
These include an obsessive focus on irrelevancies such as how a woman looks and whether she has children, the disregard of her ideas in meetings only to have them endorsed when they emerge from the mouths of men, and the persistence of soul- and career-destroying sexual harassment and assault.
Double standards persist, too. The ways in which the same behaviours are judged as proof of leadership capacity in men, but are disqualifying when done by women — a problem that academic analysis puts down to the fact that the Anglosphere’s very definition of leadership is a collection of traits — assertiveness, competitiveness, decisiveness — that sexist cultures associate with masculinity.
This leaves women leaders damned if they do and damned if they don’t. If they lean into such masculine traits, they’re unfeminine or morally “bad” woman (remember all the ballyhoo made about Gillard’s “deliberate childlessness”, her empty fruit bowl, and the relentless way she was pilloried as a bitch, a witch and a liar?). But if they lean into traditional feminine qualities they might be praised as “nice women” but then dismissed as lacking “strength” and “confidence” to lead.
At the heart of the double-standard complaint is a claim that when it comes to leadership, women are not relevantly different from men. They have the same strengths and weaknesses, and thus their claim for half the positions of political power is not made on the grounds that they will do a better job leading the nation that have men, but simply because they comprise half the human population and it’s only fair.
This has not been a popular view in Australia. Instead, for much of the long history of the women’s movement in this country, feminists have positioned women as exemplary citizens (what Anne Summers called “god’s police”) and made their case for women-favouring policies based on female difference. This includes the 1923 mass mobilisation of women to protect the maternity allowance and the success of the movement in the 1940s in getting the new child endowment paid to mothers instead of fathers.
It continued through the 1990s — when premiers such as Joan Kirner and Carmen Lawrence were seen as necessary moral antidotes to the dirty politics of men — and to today, with some Australian academics arguing that recognising “feminine values” and “women’s difference” is the best way to improve the performance of teams at work.
The claim was that giving women “a go” at leading would result in different — and cleaner — politics. As Lawrence explains: “It was intrinsic to much of the early feminist debate that in seeking equality, women were not looking to simply replicate the experience of men. Nor were we enthusiastic about embracing a capitalist ethic which regarded materialism, competition and selfishness as cardinal virtues.”
Lawrence wasn’t alone. Political historian Julia Baird writes that in the early 2000s, the belief in women’s “superior morality” led to parties “pushing more women into marginal seats, and handing them portfolios muddied by the corruption or incompetence of the men before them, in the belief that they would have … some kind of purifying effect.”
Which brings us to now, and the latest kerfuffle around female leadership taking place in the West.
It concerns second-wave American feminist heroine Dianne Feinstein, now 89, and her refusal to resign her seat on the Senate Judiciary Committee despite illness meaning she’s been unable to occupy it since February. Her absence has halted the committee’s work of confirming judges in its tracks, and at a time when this is not only one of the few powers left to Democrats who no longer control the House, but when conservative judges are eviscerating the reproductive, LGBTQIA+, voting and union rights (among others) that vulnerable Americans voted them in to protect.
This is not the first time an American feminist leader has squibbed the service path and wound up costing dearly those to whom she’d ostensibly dedicated her career. Ruth Bader Ginsburg, then 87, declined to resign her Supreme Court seat at a time when then-US president Barack Obama could have replaced her. This led to her replacement being chosen by Donald Trump when she died in 2020 from a recurrence of pancreatic cancer, which has a five-year fatality rate of more than 90%.
In both cases, no one wanted to push these legends of the women’s movement against their will. But to my mind, their wills were — and in the case of Feinstein remain — the problem, exposing the possibility that for both women the bold paths they forged may never have been about womanhood writ large, but always about themselves.
To my mind, the Feinstein and Bader Ginsburg cases put an end once and for all to claims that women leaders are inherently more moral than men. While it may have been true in the past that women’s isolation in the home focusing largely on caring work would have shaped female sensibilities in ways different from men, the more their social, educational and career paths are the same, the less difference we’ll see in the ethical wisdom and integrity of different genders.
To put it bluntly, now and in future, strap in for female leaders to act as self-servingly as powerful men.
Would you rather have a female boss or prime minister? Let us know by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity.
I’ve had good female bosses, bad male bosses, bad female bosses, good male bosses. Gender is essentially irrelevant to the quality of a person’s management and/or leadership style, though I did like Jane Caro’s quip that women have the right to be as incompetent as men.
Another case in point: think of the most recent period of national Liberal government in this country. Granted that the number of women involved in this government was pitifully small, can anyone point to one of them who was significantly more ethical or decent than any of her male colleagues?
Sigh!
I guess this means that we blokes can’t look forward to a princess in shining armour coming to rescue us from ourselves, eh?
We must never forget Bridget Archer!
I like your essay very much, Leslie. You introduce balance and objectivity into this gender discussion. The headline of your piece is absolutely right.
“Women leaders are no more morally pure than men”.
It is naive and foolish to believe otherwise. I certainly would not wish to have women like, for example, Margaret Thatcher, Sophie Mirabella, or Bronwyn Bishop running anything that I had to do with.
While it is certainly true that men have treated women appallingly in the past and this is still the case in many cultures today, (I was only discussing this very issue with my (female) G.P. yesterday in the context of the blatant discrimination that extremely competent female scientists experienced as recently as 100 years ago).
I have had female bosses for about half my working life. It was never an issue for me. I could not care less about the gender of the person who is my superior (except that I would not tolerate a male spouse!), I only want a good boss with whom I can get along with.
One casual observation that I would make though, is that I have always felt more comfortable in a mixed-gender environment. It has always felt more ‘natural’. I know that blokes can exhibit a lot of ‘bluster and baloney’ (and BS) in some of those all-male environments, especially when alcohol is available.
I taught senior chemistry at an Anglican Girls Grammar for 10 years and I can tell you that I came across some real talent at that place, in terms of leadership potential as well as academic ability. Some of those girls would have left me for dead in both of those categories. They were always the most interesting students. To have ever denied those girls the prospect of advancement because of their gender would have been nothing less than criminal.
Sure, female priorities and preferences will often differ from those of males but that should not cause any major problems.
To summarize, there are good males and bad males and ‘in-between’ males and the same thing applies to females.
Shall we talk about Madeleine Albright, who, when queried about the estimated half million Iraqi children who died as a result of sanctions imposed by her government, said, “We think the price was worth it.” Or maybe we should talk about Hilary Clinton who gleefully remarked after watching the late Ghaddafi having a bayonet thrust into his anus before being shot, “We came, we saw, he died.” Perhaps we should talk about the much-sanctified Julia Gillard, who thrust struggling families into even direr poverty in a vain pursuit of murdochratic approval.
Power structures built upon murder and theft, such as our own, will throw up leaders who excel at murder and theft. Their testicular/ovarian arrangements have no relevance.
Also the charming, hymn singing Condileezza Rice – Shrub’s hatchetwoman.
Or her namesake Susan Rice who performed similar, shameless and lethal duties for Obama.
Well Griselda and Munin, between you’ve rounded up all my usual suspects between the two of you. Thanks for that. And yet, when I voice the opinion that the world would be no better off under women leaders using the examples of those usual suspects, given it takes a certain kind of individual to crave power in the first place, I’m still met with shocked disbelief and dirty looks at my apparent heresy.
What a mish-mash of ideas.
women-favouring policies based on female difference. This includes the 1923 mass mobilisation of women to protect the maternity allowance and the success of the movement in the 1940s in getting the new child endowment paid to mothers instead of fathers.
Does anyone doubt that in general, women are more likely to care for their children’s basic needs than men are?
the belief in women’s “superior morality” led to parties “pushing more women into marginal seats, and handing them portfolios muddied by the corruption or incompetence of the men before them, in the belief that they would have … some kind of purifying effect.”
Purifying effect my arse. The reason women are handed the poison chalice (latest example, Qantas) is that men don’t want it.
Witness, all those premiers, from Carmen to Kahtryn, not forgetting bankers’ friend Anna Burke.
Some saved impossible situations, some didn’t, all were competent, some brilliant, some harboured ambitions, some did not.
Outright corruption was rare to absent.
Excepting ‘Nobody’s Grrrrl“.
“…from Carmen to
KahtrynKristina…”.And Amanda Vanstone, handed a series of portfolios in succession that her male colleagues had made into a dog’s breakfast.
Would that be her Gus’s breakfast? ….. The way she served up Cornelia Rau and Vivian Alvarez….
Not to mention Tasnim Aslam, Pakistani envoy to Italy when Vanstone was Australian Ambassador there?
Vanstone actually bears out the Caro tenet that ‘every woman deserves the opportunity to prove that they can be just as incompetent as any man.’
… Talk about lipstick on a Weimaraner.