Gender quotas is one small step

50:50 members from across Ireland, of all generations, will gather today in Seanad Eireann. They will sit proudly in the public gallery to cheer the introduction of the Gender Quotas Bill into the Seanad.

They are there to witness history in the making – as the legislation which proposes to introduce a 30% gender quota for candidates of political parties at General Elections is debated.

Parties that fail to meet the quota of women candidates will face a 50% reduction in their State funding.

God speed the Bill’s journey through the Oireachtas & onto the statute books.

As we take this small but important step towards gender equality in political life, we are reminded that this is an historic day.

As Carol Hunt’s blogpost so eloquently outlines, we owe a tremendous debt of gratitude to the women who have gone before us who have fought for equality of representation.

Today, it is up to us to continue that fight.

We mustn’t be complacent…
the process of lobbying & agitating for real change in our society must continue at every level – local, national & European.

For the quota legislation to be meaningful – and to work – it must be extended to Local Government.  Local politics is often the training ground for national politics – it is where politicians cut their teeth, learn the ropes & build their networks of support.

At local level we will find good female candidates.  There are so many women doing tremendous work for their local communities, day-in-day out.  The National Women’s Council estimates that there are in the region of 22,000 local groups around the country led by women.

To meet the 30% quota, the political parties need to find 170 female candidates.

Last Autumn…
I was in Cork to see 11,000 women partake in the Cork mini-marathon.  The streets were alive with women of every age, colour, class & creed. Every one of those women was wearing a tee-shirt advertising a local cause. They were raising money for local hospitals, local schools, local shelters – that’s politics.

To these women I would say:
turn your local passions into local politics.  Join a political party and get involved.

To the political parties, I would say:
go out and ASK these women to run.

If there was one recurring theme through the recent conference in Dublin Castle on How to Elect More Women it was this: women like to be asked.   Political parties need to do more asking.

For the rest of us…
who believe in an equal society, who believe that our country would benefit from having our laws made by women & men, I would say you have 3 things to do:

–         in your circle of family and friends, ask one woman to run for politics,

–         lobby your local representative to implement quotas at local level

–         join a local branch of the 50:50 Group & get involved.

I have a 6 year old daughter who thinks she can be anything she wants when she grows up.  I have a dream that – when the time comes – she can also include politics on her list.

Edel Clancy is national chair of the 50:50 Group

 

 

 

 

From Red-Heads to Nationalism – the Irish story

By Carol HuntJournalist, permanent student, mother, feminist, book addict…
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Over the past few months there has been a sudden concern about the civic rights of red-heads.

That David McWilliams must be so pleased.

On Twitter, Facebook – and in various newspaper columns I’ve seen – appeals to government to introduce quotas not just for red-heads, but also, plumbers, volvo-drivers and Jehovah’s Witnesses.

The point, supposedly, is to suggest that the bill on Gender Quotas, to be introduced into the Seanad this Thursday, is somehow unfair and faintly ridiculous.

The people who, for whatever reasons, are against an honest attempt at increasing the number of women in Leinster House don’t believe the majority gender in this country should be afforded a temporary discriminatory quota (although it actually applies to both genders) because that will mean “everybody will want one”.

It’s a fallacious argument.
There is absolutely no correlation between hair colour, religion etc and gender – to suggest that there is, is absurd & also a little bit desperate.

But we can be guaranteed that the nonsense will continue.

Modern Ireland…
has always been a cold house for feminists despite our constant bragging about electing the first female MP to UK parliament.

In 1866, Corkwoman Hannah Haslam (1829-1922) signed the first women’s suffrage petition on these Islands. It was handed into the House of Commons by John Stuart Mill.

About 20 years later Hannah Haslam & her husband Thomas, founded the Irish Suffrage Society.

Helen Chevenix, Eva Gore-Booth, Aine Ceant, Helena Molony, Louie Bennett & Hannah-Sheehy Skeffington are just some of the extraordinary women who fought for suffrage & labour rights at the end of 19th & early 20th century.

Their achievements were many; sadly their names are remembered today, in the main, only by historians.

What happened?
In a word? Nationalism.
The Republican Brothers insisted the election of Constance Markievicz was living proof of the manifestation of equality as enshrined in the 1916 Proclamation.

The Sisters who’d fought long & hard before & during the War of Independence disagreed: The suffragette Irish Citizen Newspaper wrote on the day following this “historic achievement”:

“Under the new dispensation the majority sex in Ireland has secured one representative. This is the measure of our boasted sex equality.”

Should our revolutionary women have been surprised?

Perhaps not. Anna Parnell, ferociously successful leader of  Ladies Land League was cynically betrayed by her brother on his release from prison – she never spoke to him again.

And it was the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1912, led by the anti-feminist John Redmond, who used their balance of power in Westminster to defeat the Conciliation Bill (limited suffrage).

Redmond was so terrified of female power he specifically banned women from a conference on Home Rule.

Sinn Fein’s Arthur Griffith wasn’t much better. He had little time for “women’s causes”.

In 1914, those who’d decided not to support the Home Rule Bill – because the franchise for women was not included – were accused of  putting their feminist principles before their nationalist ones.

Republicans insisted Women’s Emancipation could only – should only –  be achieved after Independence. The founding of the nationalist Cumann na mBan had been seen as a retrograde step by feminists. Their fears were justified.

1917
In the 1917 Sinn Fein Convention – estimated attendance of 1,000 – only 12 women were selected as delegates.

Increasingly an agenda was created in which Suffragette women, Republican women, Socialist women, would have no voice or influence.

After Treaty Debates of 1922, a plea was made that women over 21 be given the vote – in accordance with the pledge contained in the Republican proclamation. But the boys of the “Free” State believed equality meant a 21 year old man was somehow “equal” to a 30 year old woman… They thought they were  being magnanimous.

And, contradicting the accusation made against Suffragettes in 1914 (that they were putting their feminist principles before their nationalist ones), they were denied equal rights because their motivations were Republican (anti-Treaty) rather than feminist.

Which makes one wonder who the contrary sex is?

With the establishment of the ultra-Catholic Free State, Irish men ensured women were returned to their proper sphere – the home.

Fianna Fáil
Just when your average feminist thought things couldn’t get any worse, Fianna Fail gained  power. Believe me Sisters, things can always get worse.

Eamon De Valera emulated the German mantra of  Kinder, Kuche, Kirche (children, kitchen, church) when he included a constitutional article which maintained that a woman’s legal place was within the home.
[In particular, the State recognises that by her life within the home, women gives to the State a support without which the common good cannot be achieved. The State shall, therefore, endeavor to ensure that mothers shall  not be obliged by economic necessity to engage in labour to the neglect of their duties in the home. Article 41.2.]

(Historian Margaret Ward has commented that Dev’s comments were indistinguishable from Nazi decrees.)

The majority of exhausted double-jobbing mothers I know are either howling with laughter or annoyance at the above constitutional piece of nonsense.

Interestingly, no-one has actually challenged it in court (many families today need two incomes to pay the bills). Could all those mortgages given to two-income families be unconstitutional?

Any takers?

The Gender Quotas Bill
It seeems likely the Gender Quotas Bill will be passed – if all the parties supporting it are to be believed (never a given).
And Fianna Fail’s suggestion that it be extended to the 2014 Local Elections should be taken up (before they get back into power & change their minds).

We need to take this chance
… for greater equality in political representaion and run with it. It may not come again. We have to support our female candidates –  and all candidates who support what are condescendingly called “women’s issues”.

As UCD historian Rosemary Cullen-Owens said of the aims of our early Suffragettes:
“… That it took fifty years for such demands to be voiced again by Irishwomen is perhaps a lesson to be noted by their successors.”

Indeed.

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We are delighted to welcome Carol Hunt as author here.  Carol recently wrote a great piece for Irish Independent after the How to Elect More Women Conference – here’s the link