Claire McGing on Gender Quotas at 50/50 Public Meeting (slides)

“Shocking the system? Looking at the gender quota proposal”

Claire McGing, Government of Ireland IRCHSS scholar, John and Pat Hume scholar, NUI Maynooth, Dublin  50-50 Group
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This is proposed

•Electoral (Amendment) (Political Funding) Bill 2011
Part 5: State Funding of Political Parties and Gender Balance:
•Head 31 – Insertion of a new section in Part III of the Electoral Act 1997 – gender balance amongst candidates of a qualified political party
 
(1)  Provide that following the next general election after the commencement of this Act half of every payment to a qualified party under Part III of the Act shall be contingent on at least 30% of the candidates whose candidatures were authenticated by the qualified political party at the last preceding general election being women and at least 30% being men.
 
(2)  Provide that on the day that is 7 years after polling day at the general election referred to in subsection (1) the threshold shall rise to 40% for women candidates and 40% for men candidates for the next following general elections.
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“Soft” Measures
•Tried, tested and usually fail!
Fine Gael Equality for Women project (2004): “At the next general election [2007], the target should be to increase the number of female Fine Gael TDs from two to between eight and ten. The number of senators should increase from one to four or five”.

–   5 women TDs & 3 senators elected

Fianna Fáil Gender Equality Action Plan (2004):  20% women candidates in 2007

–   13% women candidates

Labour had a 30% target ahead of the 2011 general election
– 27% women candidates
Greens had a 40% target for the 2009 local elections
–  22% women candidates
Sinn Féin had a 30% target the 2009 local elections

–   23% women candidates
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Questioning Quotas

•Will a quota take away the power of local party members to select candidates?
•Will ‘unqualified’ women be selected?
•Will a quota result in ‘parachuted’ candidates?
•Will women candidates be selected as ‘tokens’?
•Will parties have trouble recruiting women to run?
•Does a quota restrict voter choice?
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Are gender quotas against the Irish Constitution? – Dr Eoin Daly writes

On 4 June 2011, Dr Eoin Daly published a valuable analysis “Gender Quotas and Freedom of Association

” … the Government intends to introduce legislation requiring political parties to field a minimum quota of 30% of female candidates for elections.

This requirement will be enforced through an unusual administrative sanction. Parties failing to meet this target would, it is proposed, lose a portion of the public funding available under the Electoral Acts. The “quota” will rise to 40% after the next general election.

It is not my intention, in this post, to consider the various policy arguments surrounding the necessity or efficacy of the proposed measure.

Instead, I simply intend to consider whether, if implemented, it would likely encounter any constitutional difficulty, and the chances of success of any political party or prospective individual candidates who might challenge the constitutional validity of the relevant legislation …”

You can read the full text of Dr Eoin Daly’s detailed analysis here...

Latest News:  Dr Eoin Daly is speaking at our Public Meeting on 22 November.