As a one-time “promiscuously” educated young woman who is now an “older and wiser”, married, home-owning mother of two, I suddenly find myself of great interest to the Liberal Party, in particular the head of its aligned think tank, the Menzies Research Centre. The Australian columnist Nick Cater and I aren’t known to each other, but I nonetheless feel uniquely qualified to respond to his notion that “single young females” are the biggest threat to parties on the right and that the promised land lies with women who have reached my stage of life.
It would be easy to pick some of the low-hanging fruit from Cater’s intellectually confused analysis of the Liberal Party’s well-known “woman problem” and mock it — which many have.
Whether it was Cater’s preoccupation with and deeply offensive demonisation of single mothers (hello, the 1980s “welfare queen” is back), or his suggestion that young women think of the welfare state as some kind of sugar daddy, or his downright weird use of sexualised language to characterise the growing trend of women seeking higher education (we must, he says, “address the promiscuous access to higher education”), it was hard to know where to begin.
Cater, as some commented on social media, had said “the quiet parts out loud”. What’s more, as Rachel Withers wrote, “it’s rare to see the underlying misogyny of family values politics on such blatant display”. Indeed. All this is true.
But for me, the most interesting thing about Cater’s column was not the things he said, but what he left unsaid, specifically the aspects of the Liberal Party’s woman problem he chose to ignore or wholly misrepresent — and what that says about the party’s prospects of learning from its recent electoral wipeout and its ability to rebuild.
I would argue that, contrary to Cater’s assertion, the biggest danger to parties on the right are not single young females but old, white, misguided male dinosaurs like Cater and the self-serving and/or silent women of the right who enable them. Both are unwilling or unable to engage with the changing demographics of modern Australia and women’s current lived reality.
It’s not just single young women who pose a threat to parties of the right. The Liberal Party has a much broader “woman problem” widely recognised as a growing threat to its electoral fortunes for years. Cater should know that. The Menzies Research Centre has published three — that’s right, three — reports entitled Gender and Politics, and all were co-authored by him. They all mapped out in no uncertain terms the size of the growing so-called “gender gap” in women’s voting habits — and what that could potentially mean for the Liberal Party.
According to the first report in 2015, “Since 2001, the Liberals’ support among women relative to men has waned”. The 2001 election was a turning point for women voters in federal politics, the report correctly highlighted. For the first time in the history of the Australian Electoral Survey, female voters favoured Labor over Liberal. And fewer women than men had voted Liberal in four of the five elections since 2001.
The Liberal Party was facing a potential Waterloo with women voters at the next election, the report highlighted, hence the navel-gazing within the party.
That report was updated in 2017 and again in 2020. At no point was the issue exclusively one of “single young females” as opposed to the party’s broader problem with women. Thus, Cater’s recent claims are at odds with his own previous analysis; he should know better.
Next, let’s look at a specific example of the dangers of applying an antiquated worldview to the modern political landscape and of focusing exclusively on demonising one cohort of “young female” voters, while ignoring the concerns of others.
My key takeaway from Cater’s column was that he believes the party of Menzies should seek to exclusively engage with “the coupled homeowner” and “older wiser women”, particularly married mums. That’s not entirely wrong, though I would remove the word “exclusively” from that advice. These women are, indeed, an important demographic of voters. I just don’t think Cater has his finger on the pulse of what they want to hear.
It is indisputable that the pandemic disproportionately impacted women, in particular their ability to work and save. The impact was particularly pronounced for mothers, who disproportionately shouldered the burden of remote learning and the domestic load that resulted from prolonged lockdowns. This, rightly, led some to label the pandemic-related recession first a “she-cession” and later a “mum-cession”.
Put simply, the pandemic exposed the fragile foundations of many women’s economic security, particularly mothers. Even before the pandemic, the lifetime earnings gap for an average woman with children was $2 million dollars less than the average man with children. What’s more, women retired with one-third less superannuation than men, and women over the age of 55 comprised the fastest-growing portion of the homeless population.
The rage at this was real. And while that rage may not have seemed as potentially revolutionary compared to the tens of thousands of women marching for Justice4Women, it was there.
Yes, some women are “older and wiser”, but they are also poorer and — in alarmingly growing numbers — homeless.
It follows that policies aimed at tackling the root causes of these problems — including more investment in early-years education and care, parental leave reform, and better pay and conditions for women in traditionally undervalued “feminised” caring professions — proved politically popular. They spoke to women’s actual lived experiences.
So, I wish luck to Cater and those tempted to take his advice. They’ll need it. “Dangerous” young women are a figment of his imagination, while struggling, older women in danger of poverty and homelessness are very real.
What are the real factors influencing the vote of women in Australia? 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.
Kurt Schlichter, in the USA right-wing Town Hall, thought it amusing after the midterms to urge “repeal of the 19th Amendment as it applies to single, liberal women who vote for their Democrat Daddy in appalling numbers”. I think we can guess where Cater’s so-called “ideas” are coming from. They are not home-grown.
came here to point this out – yet another example of the LNP “borrowing” raving, rightwing nonsense from the U.S.
It seems that Newscorp’s writers cannot express original thoughts in their columns. Borrowing of ideas or plagiarism is their thing. Just ask Peter Gleeson.
Fully agree but may I point out from an old white man with an interest in language that your use of the apostrophe is incorrect who also the spelling of “Newscorp’s”.
The correct spelling, with no requirement for an apostrophe is of course “NewsCorpse” (I have used CamelCase for screen reader’s benefit to make sure my blind brethren can also enjoy. Much in the same way a fart smells).
Have a nice day.
Only one blind screen reader then?
Let them continue to be out of touch with women of all ages. They can have an extended stay in political purgatory to work on their women problem and come up with a solution.
Couldn’t agree more, long may they be deluded. In a similar category are the journos still unaware how politics and voting is changing.
The pale, male and stale leadership of Liberal Parties the country over seems hell bent on blaming pretty much every possible external reason for their ever decreasing vote. COVID-19, Women, Koalas etc. They are all petrified to admit that perhaps their time in the sun is coming to an end. At the heart of the issue is their belief that the punters that don’t vote for them are somehow temporarily misguided and will return in droves at some indeterminate point in the future.
But that’s not what this is apparently saying. I gather that Cater is writing off single women sui generis.
I hate doing this but… sui generis appears as a statement of the unique.
I think his writing off is of women in generé. He can only do that as a sui generis incredibly low intellect white LNP voting elderly man, which unfortunately is also wrong, since they are all the same and they exhibit very few unique parts.
No matter what their wives say at CWA meetings.
Perhaps Cater will expound on the virtues of arranged marriages, so that all these left-leaning single young females can be married off to older conservative husbands who will whip their reckless attitudes into shape.
Am available.
No you aren’t… are you?
Most women here would find that utterly unsurprising, Frank…:-)
Sadly, divorced ten years. Lightning yet to strike again. Even the pale and stale can live in hope, though 🙂
Considering the volume & frequency of posts from some (many?) here, it seems like Incel Central.
ouch!
Oh come on, it’s not that bad.
what, involuntary celibacy or being lumped in with Incels?
You’re not a conservative Jack, you’re a radical! 😉
walter mitty, maybe…
“The greatest pistol shot in the world thought about it for a moment… “it says puppies bark for it on the box.” My favourite line from that fantastic story!
Too desp-desp needy.
oh, don’t spoil the fun lethy, this article & thread was gloomy enough even before it started
That is Jack’s secret weapon, he is looking for the sympathy vote 😉
ha. whatever else my many masculine flaws playing a victim ain’t one of them. rather be single than a sook
It concerns me that the decimated Liberals are now unnaturally weighted to the backwards-looking rump of the Howard-Abbott era. The failure to adapt to changes happening in society gave cause for Teals to stand and win. If they were serious about preserving “the party” they would make every effort to bring the Teals back into the fold, but they won’t, because they are more serious about clinging to old-school tiers of advantage. Add to this the US Republican and FoxNews inspired politics of belligerence feeding the fire and it becomes unclear there is any path back to the middle for the Libs. If Ley fails to bring her party to a positive platform that attracts women’s votes, they will be opposition until Labor completely buggers-up. The fact that she is a one-woman band trying to do this, with a swag of highly competent women on Labor and cross-benches, merely underlines the consequences of not following community standards on equality a decade or two ago.
Ley is a big part of the problem.
I have interacted with the former minister for regional communications Bridget Archer after our town was blacked out in comms after a power outage.
I explained the situation to her in a detailed email. We had no mobile coverage and no land line. Our village is mostly elderly folks some with no mobile, all with medical issues. We had no access to 000.
Her office responded by saying we need to ensure we have some form of communications all the time.
After reading her/their response, I offered the use of a smoky fire and a blanket.
LNP women appear to be stupid as a group.
Michaelia makes very nice tea.
She’s well-practised at carrying a teapot on her head.
The biggest problem for the LNP is there’s nowhere for them to “come back” _to_.
Labor has mostly filled their centre-right economic position, and does not suffer (as much) from the accompanying socially conservative “pale, male and stale” politics.
I can’t see Ley getting anywhere. She is one of the Liberal women attempting to whip up victimhood where it doesn’t exist. And, she’s been adopting far right US hysteria language to help her do it.
Ordinary Australian women who’ve experienced a bit of life hate that sort of thing because we live real prejudice and bias and have to push through it or work around it or sometimes just accept it for the time being.
Disingenuousness as Ley is offering is a losing strategy and shows just how disconnected female Liberal leaders are from the lives of most women voters. Either her tour of Australia’s women hasn’t gotten very far or she hasn’t been listening.
Re: ‘how disconnected female Liberal leaders are from the lives of most women voters’.
Yes. Teal women seem to connect well, are all high achievers, and out-merit the stale, pale
females of the mainstream conservative core.
The Liberal road back to relevance is on a vehicle missing a few cylinders (or cells) – powerful women. If the direction (badly misaligned to the right) in Vic and WA state orgs is followed, the prospect of provide a credible alternative remains on the horizon.
Blame for this lies at the feet of those Liberals who resisted efforts to bring more women into winnable HoR seats a decade ago. It lies with those who thought ‘ditch-the-witch’ was OK but quotas was a dirty word.
In the first term the Albo government can self-motivate and self-direct on pent-up energy. But as we are seeing at the state level, where the opposition can’t present a credible alternative, governments of all hues tend to self-decompose. Maintaining a strong democracy requires the Libs do better. For those enjoying their current malaise, its worth considering that the alternatives might be worse.
Yes, whether individuals agree with the philosophy and policies of an opposing party, the Opposition does need to be strong and relevant to many for national wellbeing.
People talk a lot about Howard but we have to remember that Labor went through such a troubling time, Latham as leader was considered the answer. I suspect that the Latham-esque part of Labor finding its way to One Nation is a smaller part of the reason we’re resisting the US path.
Settled and concentrated into a rabid margin of hate and conspiracy is much better than having them hammer away within a major party where rational people feel the need to compromise from time to time, opening up cracks that people can take advantage of.
I dread to think where we’d be if Labor had allowed itself to become the moderate left wing version of PHON as the Libs seem to be allowing themselves to become a less and less moderate version of PHON.