The Price of Power: To secure selection as the candidate for a major political party requires the surrender of all those qualities generally associated with femininity. To survive as an MP, women must develop an impenetrable outer-skin which, as it thickens, leaves less and less space for the things it is supposed to protect.
I’M NOT PROUD of what I did. In fact, recalling those events,
I recoil in dismay from the memory of my former self. Why did I do it? Because
experience had taught me a very simple and brutal truth: in politics you either
master the art of destroying your opponents – or you are destroyed by them.
The media storm whipped up by Labour’s plan for ensuring
gender equality in its caucus – the so-called “Man Ban” – has concentrated all
its force on the merit-based selection versus party-mandated quotas debate.
There has been next to no attention paid to the more important question: why do
fewer women than men make it through the candidate selection process?
The whole purpose of a quota system is to even up a contest
which, from the very outset, is stacked against women. Or, perhaps, that should
read: a game which, from the very outset, is stacked against those who
demonstrate the characteristics our culture generally associates with women.
Can you stand up at a party branch meeting and respond to
anyone foolish enough to oppose your plans with such cold ferocity and
unflinching personal cruelty that not only do they shut up for the rest of the
meeting, but they never attend another? Are you willing to spend hours on the
phone lining up supporters for, and running down the opponents of, party
movers-and-shakers whose backing you need to succeed? Can you cross off the
names of former friends, allies – even lovers – from the “ticket” your faction
is running at Annual Conference? Are you prepared to assure a pivotal party
“fixer” that although you were once a fervent supporter of a cause he or she
opposed, you have now seen the error of your ways?
These are the “skills” the aspiring parliamentary candidate
needs to acquire in order to stand a reasonable chance of selection. Not to
beat about the bush, they are the skills of a sociopath: the ability to lie
convincingly; the ability to manipulate and exploit; the ability to impress and
overawe; and, most vital of all, the ability to hurt and betray other
human-beings not only without compunction – but without the slightest guilt or
remorse.
Culturally-speaking, these sociopathic qualities are
overwhelmingly associated with masculinity. And, no matter how loudly we may condemn
the men who display such immoral behaviour, when we encounter them in the flesh
it’s a very different story.
Almost against our will, we are seduced by these ruthless
individuals. Some ancient species memory kicks-in to subdue our moral qualms –
reminding us that these are the qualities that work. It reassures us that the
family, tribe or nation that places itself under the protection of such men stands
the best chance of survival. Extraordinary moral strength is required to avoid
falling under their spell.
The most pernicious aspect of modern, democratic politics is
that it cannot explicitly acknowledge any of these arcane truths. No political
party is going place an ad’ saying: “Parliamentary Candidates Needed. Must be
prepared to discard all conviction and compassion in the name of victory.
Sociopaths Preferred.”
On the contrary, the qualities “officially” sought after by
political parties (especially those of the Left) indicate the exact opposite. Fidelity,
commitment, diligence and a high level of emotional intelligence (traditionally,
the defining attributes of femininity) are the qualities demanded of a modern
politician. Significantly, these were precisely the qualities which the
pioneers of women’s suffrage promised their sex would bring to the corrupt and
cut-throat world of male politics.
It was all a lie. The women who took such blandishments at
face value and put their names forward for selection soon discovered that
sweetness and light were no match for bitterness and the night. Those with no
stomach for the vicious battles that clearly awaited women candidates and
parliamentarians, withdrew from the arena. The ones who stayed had no option
but to acquire both the weapons and the armour for competitive combat. Masculine
weapons. Masculine armour.
It was seldom a comfortable fit. Certainly not for women,
and not for an encouragingly large number of men. New Zealand’s most successful
woman politician, Helen Clark, reported being physically sick after some
meetings of the Labour caucus – so toxic were the tactics of her male
colleagues. By the time she became Prime Minister, however, her armour was as
hard as dragon’s hide and her swords and stilettoes honed exceptionally sharp.
The great danger, of course, is that those who develop such
an impenetrable outer-skin leave less and less space for the things it was
supposed to protect. Likewise, those who master the skills of the sociopath too
often forget that they were ever anything else.
I was lucky to escape that fate.
What disquiets me is not how few women make it through
candidate selection – it is the number who succeed.
This essay was
originally published in The Press of Tuesday,
9 July 2013.
10 comments:
"Likewise, those who master the skills of the sociopath too often forget that they were ever anything else"
Perhaps that explains John Keys persistent and increasing lack of memory.
Heh heh heh...
Your post reminds me of Rob Muldoon's comment about Ann Hercus along the lines of "the softest thing about her are her teeth" he could have meant it as a compliment.
Actually the list gives Labour the opportunity to look gender perfect.
What that will do to attract voters of course is quite another matter.
Labour has become more about appearance than substance.
That Blair had the same approach some 20 years ago (and recently dumped by british labour should be enough warning. That Cameron wants the Tories to adopt it is even more alarming.
Eloquent as always Chris, but too cynical, surely. There remain human loyalties (or did remain). I once taxed Richard Prebble and Ken Shirley about not subjecting Annette King and Jim Sutton and several others to the withering Parliamentary scorn for ACT of which Richard in particular was a master. Ken's explanation I remember as something like "in the darkest days of division as the best government of my life was collapsing, they were our mates. We're not going after them. You can but not us".
Politicians deserve all the cynicism they get :-).
Glad to see you are learning and seeing your rushed masculine judgments perhaps having been a bit unfair and unreasonable towards the "gentler gender".
I make the same mistake, and I also felt caught up in criticising Labour for wasting time on such a debate. In reality it was not even policy for an election, it was just about a remit for discussing internal processes, that may have assisted some female candidates in certain electorates to get the final bit of support they needed, in order to get even more electorate representatives for Labour into Parliament.
Nevertheless, it ended up as the main topic in the media, and it was poor of Shearer and others to not have prepared, and not have sent a clear message to the media vultures out there.
NZ media is near gutter stuff these days, that is the mainstream media, and I am NOT sorry towards you journalists that engage in all these cheap shot attacks and stories. You should apply proper journalistic skills, and if your employers do not give you the time to do this, quit, get another job, do something else for a living, and put in the extra effort after hours on blogs and whatever else, to tell the bloody true story of what goes on.
Does it feel so great to be a prostitute for your bosses, to write only the crap and one liners they want and allow you to write? Are you happy being called a journalist writing biased shit?
It is a disgrace what happened last week, and yes, the Labour Party and leadership have partly to blame themselves. But the rest of the blame goes to media that only pick up cheap stories, necessitating no work and effort, and that can be dressed up as stories, that really are NO stories.
You should all be so ashamed, to misinform, to distract, to let a John Key and government off the hook, and only do the cheap, nasty footwork for their foot soldiers instead. Who pays you, and for what? It is not journalism, what I saw last week, and what I sadly see more of every day in this country.
Get another job, dear folks.
What about lesbians and gays? There are a plethora of them in Labour.
All that sociopathic behavior you describe Chris needs to be molded into a framework that embraces critical thinking. Argument maps (circulated) would cut the crap.
The human drama is the payment for taking part in politics whereas (for example) the results of a debate graph are dead boring (even though 1 inch is worth a mile of rhetoric).
http://debategraph.org/home
"What about lesbians and gays? There are a plethora of them in Labour."
There's meaning here somewhere?
There is this curious concept that seems to underline so much comment that only people who most closely resemble you in gender, occupation, ethnic origin etc etc can possibly represent you properly in parliament.If this is true then how come the Labour party have so many gays and ex-union officials, schoolteachers and so on-more than are a %age of the populace. Truth is most people look for someone whose philosophy and idealology most closely resembles their own. They want someone whose ideas they agree with. Rawiri Taonui in the LIstenener this week says that the 23 MPs of ethnic Maori decent in parliament can't possibly represent Maori because they don't think as he thinks they should.It seems that Labour constantly misread this.
You actually worry me Chris. Just how much of a left winger are you or supposed to be? The David Shearers of this world are absolutely decent, but not very left wing.
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