David Cameron has just resigned as UK prime minister after unexpectedly losing the Brexit referendum; Shinzo Abe's economic reforms are running out of steam in Japan; and male politicians as varied as Francois Hollande in France, Petro Poroshenko of Ukraine and Mexico's Enrique Pena Nieto are struggling with their poll ratings. But clearly not so tough that they can't hog the limelight.
The UK is still reeling from the male-dominated EU Referendum campaign where we saw that just 18 percent of all those quoted in the media in the campaign were women.
Meanwhile, women in politics are making up for lost time.
Angela
Merkel has been the most powerful person in Europe for almost a decade
now; Home Secretary Theresa May has just made a decisive bid to be the
UK's second female prime minister and has already seen off Boris
Johnson; and Hillary Clinton has already made history in becoming the first female presumptive presidential nominee of a major U.S. political party.
They are all part of a growing list of superstar female politicians around the world including Aung San Suu Kyi of Myanmar, Nadiya Savchenko of Ukraine, and Nicola Sturgeon in Scotland. Clearly something really is changing for women in politics.
And yet, things aren't changing fast enough. The roots of the Fawcett Society
are in our founder Millicent Fawcett's fight to secure for women in the
UK the right to vote on equal terms as men which began with a petition
to parliament in 1866. Some 150 years later and women's representation remains dismal in the UK with women making up just 29 percent of MPs.
It has been more than 50 years since Sirimavo Bandaranaike became the
first modern female head of government in the world. Since then we've
had a great number of powerful and important female leaders including
Margaret Thatcher, Golda Meir, Indira Gandhi, Benazir Bhutto, Yulia
Tymoshenko, and Christine Lagarde, currently head of the IMF.
Despite these high profile examples of women achieving the top jobs, they make up only 23 percent of national legislators worldwide.
Some countries are leading the way: Rwanda has the highest representation of women with 64 percent women
in parliament and Senegal is sixth with a 43 percent female
legislature. Meanwhile, the UK is 48th with 29 percent, and on 19
percent the United States is a very poor 97th, falling behind
Afghanistan with 28 percent. Despite some of their recent woes, men are
still the majority of top politicians around the world, making decisions
for all of us.
Why are we still
missing so many women in our politics? There are three key issues the
Fawcett Society has identified -- identification, selection, and
attrition.
Firstly, not enough women identify politics as an area they can or want to take part in -- only two percent of girls in a survey conducted in the UK
identify being prime minister as their career aspiration. Women may
feel that politics does not fit with their caring responsibilities and
others may be put off by the macho way politics is often conducted.
Secondly,
even if women then get through that pipeline and decide to stand, party
elites who select candidates often have a very clear idea of what the
ideal candidate looks like -- and he's not often a woman.
Finally,
although all politicians experience abuse, women in politics face
uniquely sexist abuse and often a macho political culture.
Exceptional actors
Fawcett research in the UK
identified a range of sexist incidents against female councillors in
Britain, so is it any wonder that representation of women at local
government level has stalled for over a decade at 32 percent.
It
shouldn't be surprising that the women who do make it through are
exceptional political actors in their own right, and excel when they get
the top jobs.
And it is not just politicians, the lack of women's representation matters for all of us.
The evidence is clear -- getting more women in politics doesn't just
change politics and the nature of decision making, but the changes
accelerate with the more women who take part.
Having more women in politics means more attention is paid to issues which specifically affect women, in areas like childcare, domestic violence, and equalities legislation.
Change too slow
Devolution in Wales and Scotland in the late 1990s
saw unprecedented numbers of women elected to the Scottish Parliament
and the Welsh Assembly, resulting in 50:50 representation in Wales in
2003. Within the first two terms of the Welsh Assembly, female
legislators were responsible for raising childcare 62 percent of the
times it was debated, for raising domestic violence 74 percent of the
time, and equal pay 65 percent of the time. This resulted in tangible
changes in policy: from longer maternity leave for teachers to housing
priority for women fleeing domestic violence. The Hansard Society has
argued that female legislators often became strong advocates for areas
of policy of particular (but not exclusive) interest to women.
So
how do we get more women at the top? Change has been too slow for too
long, so Fawcett are calling for time-limited quotas for women in
positions of power which will help to speed up progress wherever they
are implemented, such as on corporate boards.
We
also think that all political parties should use positive action
measures, such as only shortlisting women in certain contests, to
improve women's representation at all levels. Focusing on local
government is important as a pipeline for strong candidates, but one
often overlooked.
And it seems
obvious, but basic diversity data is often still not collected on people
standing for and achieving positions of power, so we recommend that the
British Electoral Commission
collect and publish diversity data on candidates in the UK at local and
national elections and for other countries to do the same.
It
has never been a more exciting time for women in politics and yet women
are still startlingly absent from the decision making table. Equal
representation of women is not just fair, it is good politics and good
policy for all of us too.
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