Over the weekend, Finance Minister Senator Mathias Cormann barely blinked when he dismissed a question about the number of women in politics as a “side issue”.
In two words, he spat out all that we know to be true about the Abbott Government – women’s issues are fringe, something on the side to worry about only when ‘important issues’ are not in hand.
Senator Cormann joins the ‘illustrious’ club of generations of male politicians who just do not feel the need to act on female representation.
I’m sure that those worthy representatives in the early 20thcentury had so many pressing issues to consider in drafting the constitution for our new nation, that the role for half the population in the business of government and the chance to have a vote, were just ‘side issues’. Fortunately for us – and when I say us, I mean society as a whole – women of the time did not accept these rights were a ‘side issue’, and they refused to be sidelined.
It took a while and it demanded strong brave women and men to agitate. Those women did not have with them the advantage of statistics and clear evidence highlighting the economic advantages of women sharing in the business and political processes.