Politics is sexist, but not in the ways we’ve been talking about

Posted on September 30, 2014 in Equality Debates

TheGlobeandMail.com – News/Politics
Sep. 30 2014.   Vasiliki Bednar

Vasiliki (Vass) Bednar is a public policy professional and an Action Canada Fellow. She has volunteered for the Ontario Liberals.

In politics, our interpretation of what constitutes an act of sexism has shrivelled to a superficial social media-driven cherry-picking that barely skims the surface. We ignore the real prejudice and discrimination against women that infects our potential policy-making. This has to change.

Current conversations about sexism tend to be far more trivial than structural. We have become fixated on raw ratios and distracted by physical appearances and sexual orientation – sexism’s super obvious surface. This frustratingly narrow focus has drawn attention from the more important and thorny contemporary women’s issues: a persistent wage gap, unenforceable board quotas, choice in reproductive health, provision of affordable child care, and parental-leave benefits. The absence of a national feminist organization to spearhead this kind of comprehensive evaluation of public policy leads to the degradation of our politics. Instead of frank debate during a writ, we get political operatives and members of the media skimming careless Facebook posts and offensive tweets for frivolous sexist sound bites. This is as counterproductive as it is silly. At the end of the day it accomplishes nothing for Canadian women.

Take Ontario’s recent June election. It was punctuated early with a few accusations of “sexism” from Progressive Conservatives after Liberal candidates Jack Uppal and David Mossey were thoughtless; the former re-posting a list of the “differences between men and women” and the latter liking big butts (and not lying about it!) – on his Facebook page. However, their degrading lapses seemed to cancel out Hammurabi-style when we were reminded that PC Wayne Wettlaufer had earlier tweeted something similarly slanderous about the so-called fairer sex. So many men have said chauvinistic things about women on social media that screencaps lose their utility as an electoral weapon each election cycle. As a result, sexism rooted in public policy options cease to be an issue of public interest.

This limited definition of what sexism is speaks volumes about the lack of a satisfying feminist lens for evaluating policy proposals. If we had really wanted to talk about The S Word (sexism) during the recent provincial election, for example, we should have used it to critique the parties’ platforms and consider how their promises would affect women’s economic participation and outcomes. Instead of focusing on trivial digital transgressions, Ontarians might have instead gossiped about, say, the deeply anti-women nature of the Conservatives’ platform.

From a policy perspective, not investing in childcare improvements to encourage maternal labour force participation, support families, and facilitate early learning was – quite simply – sexist. As was opposing a minimum-wage increase, which will benefit women clustered in part-time work. Similarly unfair to women was the opposition of cost-sharing of IVF and promise to block wage increases for child care and personal support workers; both of whom are disproportionately female. Lastly, the hallmark of the “Million Jobs Plan” – a focus on the manufacturing and skilled trades sectors – was fundamentally sexist as those sectors are disproportionately composed of men.

Part of the reason substantive public policy proposals aren’t always met with the scrutiny they deserve is that Canada lacks an institution to do the work and modern feminism is fractal. Nonetheless, we – feminists and otherwise – need to be more rigorous and less lazy. We can’t just keep carefully counting the number of women on the ballot and in our legislatures and tell ourselves that modest growth represents progress for women in politics or that we as a society have made great gains when we don’t make fun of someone’s scrunchie. Yes, it is important that more women run for public office and it is exhilarating when they win. But a few months ago, in our excitement over catching the digital transgressions of candidates for provincial office we totally forgot to talk about the female-and-family-friendliness of party platforms from a critical feminist perspective during a historical provincial election. Indeed, we pointed fingers and briefly talked about bums.

All I’m asking for in the 2015 federal election are platforms that recognize and address women’s unique socioeconomic challenges and for people to recognize it when they don’t. Perhaps we will find some time during this new permanent campaign to grant real “sexism” the scrutiny it deserves and pump up the conversation as if it has been diligently doing squats. Canada could use a little more girl power, anyways.

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One Response to “Politics is sexist, but not in the ways we’ve been talking about”

  1. I agree with having equal rights for all people. I feel that we are all equal as human beings. We need to breathe, we all bleed, we eat, and sleep. We all have ideas, good and bad. We have opinions, and feelings. We have personalities and perspectives and values. We know this, Yet we constantly wage war on each other. There should not be discrimination against skin colour or sex, age or otherwise. We need to stop looking at each other negatively for our differences, realize that together we are “human” and embrace our cultural differences while still being empathetic towards our fellow woman/man. In our society we express derogatory ideas towards people across the board. This should not be. This also should not be coming from our politicians as this piece suggests. Politicians are partly seen as rule makers and passers of legislature. For someone in this position to make derogatory comments toward woman, especially when it is known that there is a marked difference between the number of men and women in our political system says what to our population? That this kind of behaviour is ok? This kind of behaviour is not ok and needs to be recognized as ignorant. We truly need to make a choice to look beyond the surface of sexism as there are other important women’s issues that don’t get addressed while we address unsavory comments as being the top priority.

    I feel that women definitely deserve the same rights and freedoms and benefits as men do and I understand how not investing in childcare improvements to encourage maternal labour force participation could seem sexist. However, there really isn’t anything keeping women from applying and getting positions in the skilled trades field other than personal decisions to have families. A lot of people want to have families and live happy family lives and I can completely understand that. Perhaps that does need to change in the trades. This still does not prevent women from working in those positions. I also feel that perhaps the “wage gap” comes from their being so many more women in human service fields than men and more men than women in the trades and the differences in pay they experience but that has more to do with personal choice I feel than discrimination. Provision of child care doesn’t solely apply to women either. I know men who have to pay for their children’s day care/child care fees out of living in a balanced reciprocal relationship. I also know women whose families help them out with their childcare/child care fees. This piece speaks about the lack of a “National Feminist organization” to evaluate public policy. Perhaps that is needed. Unfortunately for too long this has been such a male dominated society of elite 1% that it has become practice to “fight for your rights” when we should be born into and able to live within the same rights to equality.

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