Tony Abbott’s career should have been over years ago. At least, that’s what Julia Gillard says.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott has made a number of sexist gaffes over the course of his political career.
There was the time he described the possibility of gender equality as “folly“; the time he described women’s virginity as “a gift”; the time he said one of his party’s female candidates had “sex appeal”, and the time he described his greatest achievement as Minister for Women as the repeal of the carbon tax.
(And let’s not forget the infamous on-air wink he gave when a talkback caller said she worked for an adult sex line.)
Related: If this is your best effort as Minister for Women? You need to resign.
But it was on 23 March 2011 that Abbott made the move that should have spelled the end of his political career– at least, that’s according to former Prime Minister Julia Gillard.
That was the day Abbott gave a speech in front of two signs with deeply misogynistic undertones. “Ditch the Witch,” one of the now-infamous signs read, while another declared: “Ju-liar… Bob Browns [sic] bitch”.
Mr Abbott’s decision to address the crowd outside Parliament House in Canberra with such signs directly behind him should have spelled his political end, according to Ms Gillard.
Read more: The only TV show anyone’s going to be talking about today.
“I really don’t know why this wasn’t a career-ending moment for Tony Abbott – sexism is no better than racism,” Ms Gillard declared in The Killing Season: The Long Shadow documentary, part three of which will be screened tonight.