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Four women in the cabinet? You cannot be serious

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/ / 7 Comments
Theresa May?

Nothing has changed

It turns out that it still doesn’t come naturally, putting women into government. The chaps tried—a bit. They scratched their heads and ransacked the cupboards anxiously and came up with four new ministers. Presumably they all scratched their heads too.

As they surveyed the tidal wave of feminine ability storming up the beaches of work and life, they presumably knew that the fact of more women at university doing better, more women in the civil service and in the city, more women in journalism, law and medicine, meant that they had to do something about putting a female face to politics that did not contemptuously involve a nice hairstyle and a maternity dress. But it feels as if it felt a bother.

They may even have been dimly aware that out there in the badlands of the economy, a long way away from the glossy strains of

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  1. May 13, 2010

    Duncan Brown

    Apologies. This has now been corrected.

     
  2. May 13, 2010

    Frank

    Four women are quite enough to keep the place clean surely? Joking aside,I’m glad they haven’t just placed a token women in the cabinet. I would rather see a women with some substance and fire. Labor don’t think twice about the candidate as long as they fit the image its fine. That is rubbish and demeaning to everyone. It may be a while until the right people come along and that is how it should be the right person.

     
  3. May 13, 2010

    Raven

    Here here Jean. “Male, pale and stale”, a description applied elsewhere, seems pretty apt for the Cabinet generally (although good to see Baroness Warsi included)

     
  4. May 14, 2010

    Marie Phillips

    While you are quite right to bemoan the lack of women in frontline politics, it might also be worth flicking to the front of any issue of Prospect and counting the female versus male contributors. Commissioning this piece is, sadly, purest (and I fear blind) hypocrisy.

     
  5. May 15, 2010

    carol grayson

    Neither do the government seem to want to engage much with women outside of parliament or look at issues that affect us. As a widow/carer/former nurse/academic/campaigner/researcher specialising in the field of health/human rights I would have thought I had something to offer. As winner of the 2009 Economic and Social Research Council Michael Young award I have tried repeatedly to meet with Deartment of Health Officials…Why?…To disseminate my research on the “worst medical treatment disaster in the history of the NHS” the infection of haemophiliacs with HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C through contaminated NHS blood and its impact on wives, carers and widows. Shall we say obtaining a commitment to look at this issue is akin to drawing blood from a stone…

    http://www.esrcsocietytoday.ac.uk/ESRCInfoCentre/about/CI/CP/societynow/issue4/blood_trade.aspx

     
  6. May 18, 2010

    ME

    I thought long and hard about posting this, but decided that the historical record must be defended if we are to be serious about re-thinking or evaluating feminism.
    You identify a pattern, but, I am afraid, you are also part of the problem because of the way you airily trivialise the feminism of the 70s as a matter of ‘not liking men.’
    This is one of the most powerful and persistent memes in anti-feminism.
    This characterisation of the feminism of the 70s and your relationship to it is a gross misrepresentation: “kind of feminist who liked men (and so was beyond the pale in the seventies”
    The feminist movement of the seventies and early eighties was incredibly diverse, with socialist feminists, liberal feminists (who both very much worked with men), radical feminists, radical-separatist feminists. “Liking” men was not the issue dividing or linking feminists or distinguishing feminists from non-feminists. There were very different analyses about gendered power and yes different aims and strategies. There were a host of vibrant campaigns, from supporting the organisation of night-cleaners to ‘reclaiming the streets’ to anti ‘beauty contests.’

    I was involved and the history of this period is well-documented. I also encountered you many times during that period; you chose not to get involved with feminism for many reasons: your own analysis that it wasn’t the ‘primary issue,’ as well as because of the attitudes of your ‘political social circle.’
    There were many problems with the feminist movement of the 70s and its legacies, but
    this is just -well – silly and ill-informed.
    You have unbounded rights and opportunities to express how you personally ‘felt’ about the feminist movement of that period, but to contemptuously fly in the face of historical evidence is not serious politics or scholarship or good journalism.

     

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Jean Seaton

Jean Seaton is a professor of media history at the University of Westminster and the official historian of the BBC