International Women’s Day 2012 – a personal view by Paul O’Mahony

Paul O’Mahony is @omaniblog on Twitter – his business is MarketingWriteNow.com  -he’s written & recorded this piece specially for International Women’s Day

Why I support the aims of the 5050 Group – audio version of blogpost written for International Women”s Day 2012 (mp3)

Why do I support the aims of the 5050 Group?

Simple… I have a 6 year old daughter (& 2 sons too).  I want her to rule the world – or at least feel she could run anything she likes when she grows up…

As a parent, I feel responsible for bringing her back to Ireland –  from UK where she was born.  She had no power, no ability to influence where she grew up.  It’s my fault she grew up in Ireland.  That’s the way I think…

So when I got a chance to go to the Fianna Fáil Ard Fheis, I swallowed my pride – I buried my impulse to damn Fianna Fáil –  in favour of my will to be a good parent. I went willingly into “that good night“.

I support 5050 Group because…
it was formed to lobby for a better Ireland – for an Ireland in which my daughter could grow up taking it foregranted laws are made by women & men equally.  That’s what I want her to assume.  Unconsciously & consciously suck it up that she lives in an environment in which she can flourish…

I don’t want my child to grow up in a society in which men make laws & women pull strings behind the scenes.  Pubic life is for all.

For me this is a crystal clear issue.
Gender quotas are trivial compared with the big picture.  The really important matter is who makes the laws.   Who debates & votes on legislation…  who interprets the laws in the courts…  For me the best way to ensure my child gets an Ireland I can comfortably die in is for the Oireachtas of Ireland to be occupied by 50% of each gender.  Parliament & Constitution set the framework of culture, icons, symbols & flags that matter fundamentally.

Just to be clear…
those who oppose gender quotas in Irish politics may well be decent people – the only thing separating us may be the tactical question of whether quotas will lead to improvement.  But opposition to quotas may also disguise attachment to the status quo.  Those who oppose gender quotas are responsible for persuading me they are not “backwoodsmen” – conservative old codgers dedicated to putting gender equality “on the long finger“.

I have no time for those who oppose gender quotas in principle.  All I care about is whether people are on the side I favour, the side that will result in my daughter being free to apply all her talents.

Others may take a different view.
That doesn’t bother me – I have only one vote.  Thank goodness each person has only one vote.  This is not about political ideology or political point-scoring.  No matter how many Fine Gael or Fianna Fail young people oppose change – I count each person as having only one vote.

Why support 5050 Group?
I’m clear on why I do.  Even if I fail to convince one single person to join the struggle to change Ireland for the better in this respect –  at least I’m clear on my desire.

Let there be change.

I’ll admit I’ve always been a radical.  I’m on the extreme wing of the gender equality in politics movement.  If it was up to me, I’d reserve 50% of the seats in Dail Eireann for women.  I totally agree with Kathleen Lynch when she says “I want to vote for mediocre women.”  As far as I’m concerned the quality can wait – I want the stats first.

Whether women like it or not, I insist they should be lawmaking. Whether men like it or not, I insist they deserve no more than 50% of the vote on every single law & local authority bye-law.

This is an extreme view…
I can & do collaborate with people who don’t share my extreme view.  I don’t expect anyone to agree with me.  But I am fighting the good fight for a better world for my child.  That’s what a good-enough parent is meant to do, isn’t it?

I started off writing this
in a spirit of celebrating International Women’s Day 2012 – I end up throwing myself forward with the Suffragettes.  They are my mentors – even though I won’t pretend to know exactly how they all thought & acted.

Tomorrow I’ll calm down
& write more measured argument…  I’ll apply forensic skills to the so-called logic of my apparent opponents.  Today is a day for passion & honesty.

That’s why I’m with 5050.  If you’re with us – join up.  We have a lot of work to do.

 

6-Step action plan to promote gender equality in elected office

Have you ever wanted someone to paint the outline of a journey you were on? Sketch the direction – give you a map… ?  Offer you a route?

Pippa Norris & Mona Lena Krook have written a great roadmap.  It’s very helpful for thinking about changes we need in Ireland – if we are to achieve 50:50 by the year 2020

They suggest a 6-step Action Plan:

Step 1 : Constitutional rights
Guarantee equal rights for women & men, including rights to voting suffrage & candidate nomination.

(Have we fully achieved this? I think the Irish Constitution does this…)

Step 2 : Electoral system
Reform the type of electoral system; PR with large district magnitudes maximizes opportunities for women.

(Big constituencies are better for gender equality – 4 & 5-seaters much better than 3-seaters?)

Step 3 : Capacity development
Strengthen skills & resources of women in pipeline for elected office, with initiatives by parties, media & NGOs, including knowledge networks, mentoring programs, skills training & funding for women candidates.

(Training & mentoring : this is where Women for Election are so important. General Secretaries of political parties too. For media, Women on Air will provide media skills training, publicity & networking opportunities for women – all needed for gender equality.  There may be other valuable resources? What’s being done to fund the development of women candidates?)

Step 4 : Parliamentary reform
Reform rules & internal procedures within parliament, including facilities & working conditions, hours of sitting, principles for leadership recruitment & provision of childcare facilities.

(Oh dear, oh dear… Who invented the rules & procedures of the Oireachtas? The facilities & working conditions etc…?  Certainly our current situation was not designed with gender equality in mind.  There is a mountain of work to do? And maybe a wealth of conversations, debates & arguments to be had?)

Step 5 : Party rules & recruitment procedures
Review internal candidate recruitment processes within each party; adopt fast track strategies in party rulebooks & regulations to achieve gender equality for nominated candidates.

(Political parties have already reviewed their processes. Some are close to conclusions – but the situation is so dominated by men, & change so slow, that gender quotas are now “the only show in town”.
It will be tough for some men who hoped to be selected.  Tough. Hopefully, many decent political men will be persuaded to promote gender equality in practice. Certainly this is the time for many changes within political parties?)

Step 6 : Legal quotas
Review laws regulating candidate recruitment processes for all parties; use of reserved seats for women members, or gender quotas for candidates, generally expand women’s representation

(The Gender Quota Bill will be introduced in the Seanad on Thursday 2 February – in 8 days. Given huge cross-party support for the Bill, we will soon have candidate gender quotas in national elections.
But will the Bill be amended?  Will quotas be extended for the 2014 local elections? It would make a huge difference if there were gender quotas for selecting candidates in local elections. Legally-required of political parties or voluntarily-entered-into by parties?

But quotas are only one of the changes that matter. Quotas alone will not lead to gender equality in elected office. We need change on many fronts?  We need politicians, pressure groups & support groups making alliances for change?
We need to expect & welcome challengers who do their best to defend the status quo. We’ve heard from Michael McDowell & Joanna Tuffy TD, for example. They’ve clarified their 
opposition gender quotas. In their own way, they may help us promote gender equality?)   

It was a tweet from Claire McGing (member of 50:50 Group, @claire_mcging) on 24 January that alerted me to this 6-step Action Plan.  Ms Ajla Van Heel, Gender Officer OSCE ODIHR presented it  to “How to Elect More Women” Conference on 20 January.

[Pippa Norris & Mona Lena Krook, [Harvard University & Washington University in St Louis, USA] were commissioned by OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions & Human Rights (ODIHR).

Their full report is the “Baseline study for the OSCE/ODIHR Handbook on Measures to Promote Women’s Participation in Political Parties.”