For the last couple of weeks we’ve been introducing you to some of the better known women who read Mamamia. We like to refer to them as the women sitting next to you at the dinner party.
So far we’ve had the pleasure to meet Leigh Sales (journalist and presenter of the iconic current affairs program ABC’s 7.30) and Clare Bowditch (singer, story teller and ARIA Award winner).
This week, we’re sitting down with Senator Penny Wong, Minister for Finance and Deregulation.
MM. You’ve been asked time and time again about how your own views on gay marriage contradict the position of your party. That must get tiring after a while. How do you deal with that? Do you regularly lobby your colleagues around the issue?
PW: I made a choice when I stood for Parliament as a Labor Party member that I would argue my opinions internally, rather than publicly, as part of the Caucus process, and I have done so. The Labor Party adopted a new platform last year with regards to marriage equality – we support marriage equality – and the PM has enabled a conscience vote on this legislation in the Parliament. I am very pleased to have progressed this important issue with my Labor colleagues and Rainbow Labor.
MM. You’re Australia’s finance minister but traditionally it has been unusual for women in politics to hold money-related portfolios. Did you find that your gender impacted the way people viewed your appointment to or performance in that role?
PW: Overall, most people deal with me on my merits. I do notice the extent to which some men in parliamentary debate react to and treat women differently.