I was reading the comments and reactions to our manifesto on politicalreform.ie last night. The final comment was from a student in one of the larger universities talking about how he cannot attract women to his politics group in the university. He has therefore concluded that women simply are not interested in politics, they are just not political.
With a ratio of 20 men to 2 women this young man has concluded that it’s the content and not the structures or the culture that is putting women off. The same presumption is made at a national level – 15% of the candidates for GE11 are female therefore only 15% of the female population is interested in politics.
We need to challenge this perception.
We need to make the distinction between the structures that prevent women getting elected – well argued as the 5 C’s – and the substance of politics and policy.
Let’s talk about the grassroot organisations that women are involved in all over the country. According to the National Women’s Council there are over 2,500 voluntary organisations all over the country run by women. You can’t tell me that these women lobbying for better schools, better sports clubs, better facilities in deprived areas etc are not political.
You can’t tell me that a woman who is running her own business faced with regulations; EU directives, employment laws and restrictions is not interested in politics.
You can’t tell me that the primary carers in this country namely women, with a sick child/parent/neighbour queueing for a bed in the local hospital has no interest in how our health service is run.
You can’t tell me that women in homes all over the country who are desperately trying to make their household budgets stretch in the wake of the most severe budget in history are not interested in politics.
We, in the 5050 group believe that women have a democratic right as citizens to participate in law-making, and a moral duty to participate in developing a more sustainable future for our country.
Nothing short of an overhaul of the current system obliging political parties to take action will change the current regime.
Help us to break down the barriers to access to the polical system.
Take a look at the video below – this is what political women in Universities have to deal with – no wonder they don’t join in – I wouldn’t!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iyTfG_jf194
Consenting absolutely!
Especially the criterion “involvement with grassroot organisations” proves a high degree of political commitment.
So why not engage with political parties and elections to the same degree? My personal reason: Because parties are seeking power, and therefore would compromise on the original basic aims. As I work to get our human rights respected, why should I support any party, knowing they will sell HR of minorities in exchange for a few votes?
I guess like meself many women have very other political interests than those promoted by parties. If I remember right, it was the CEO of Deutsche Bank, who said “I don’t mind who is chancellor under my rule.” Maybe that’s a stance women should take too.
Love, Aoife
It’s funny: as soon as I read the question ‘Are women political?’, I was thinking “bloody hell, every decision I make every day has a political dimension; how can any one think women aren’t political”. The food I buy, the clothes I wear, the wellbeing of the people I care about, the wellbeing of the society I live in – its all political.
Of course what it is, is that women nationally and globally don’t equally participate in political structures with men, even in societies where they’re allowed to. Just as whalebone corsets didn’t allow us to breathe in the 19th C neither do the current narrow, structures in the 21st C.