On Calvary Street are trellises
Where bright as blood the roses bloom,And gnomes like pagan fetishes
Hang their hats on an empty tomb
Where two old souls go slowly mad,
National Mum and Labour Dad.
James K. Baxter
Ballad of Calvary Street
1969
JAMES K. BAXTER’S stereotypes, “National Mum” and “Labour Dad”, strike a discordant note in the Twenty-First Century New Zealander’s ear. Most obviously because the political loyalties of men and women have, in the 55 years since Baxter wrote his poem, undergone a dramatic reversal. Labour supporters, today, are much more likely to be women, while National’s support-base has become disproportionately male. How is this dramatic shift in the political allegiances of the sexes to be explained?
The most important driver of the so-called “gender gap” has been the steady erosion of working-class power. Many factors have been at work in this process, but the most important is the slow demise of what was formerly the Left’s most important constitutive myth.
The move to drive women and children out of the paid workforce (which, in the early days of industrial capitalism, they had dominated) was seen (at least by men) as a moral and economic triumph. Not only were society’s most vulnerable members rescued from the ruthless exploitation of capitalist employers, but their return to the “safety” of the domestic sphere, by shrinking the pool of available industrial workers, allowed husbands, fathers and sons to drive-up wage-rates and reclaim the “breadwinner” role so central to the sustainability of patriarchy. Accordingly, setting the price of labour, and growing the political strength that flowed from working-class organisation, was seen as the work of men, by men, for men.
As anyone who has ever heard Judy Collins’ inspiring rendition of the song “Bread and Roses” will attest, the idea that the advance of the working-class was the work of men, alone, is nonsensical. In the clothing and textile industries especially women workers vastly outnumbered men, and their struggles for economic justice were waged no less fiercely than those of their “brothers”.
It nevertheless remains an historical fact that in the vast majority of factories, in the coal mines and the steel mills, in transportation and on the docks, it was overwhelmingly a man’s world. The left-wing project, although conceptually inseparable from the steady advance of working-class power under capitalism, was also presented as a cause in which the qualities and responsibilities of masculinity were constantly made manifest.
Culturally, project and cause came together in the artistic and literary figure of the working-class hero. With every economic and social advance, the pride of “working-men” grew. Their unions and their parties were hailed as the engines of the future, generating a muscular progressivism in which males placed themselves unfailingly at the heart of political action.
So much for “Labour Dad’s back-story. How was “National Mum” created?
Fundamentally, the National Party’s assiduous courting of the female voter is a reflection of the New Zealand Right’s desperation to break the Left’s easy domination of the electorate in the late-1930s and throughout the 1940s.
That the “women’s vote” might deviate significantly from that of the men’s was demonstrated with startling force in the British general election of 1931. At the behest of King George V, the British Labour leader, Ramsay Macdonald, joined forces with the Conservatives and the Liberal Party to form the “National Government” – a grand coalition to address the devastating impact of the Great Depression. Predictably, Macdonald’s “treachery” split the Labour Party and divided the working-class.
Appealing to the British people for what he called a “doctor’s mandate” to heal the country’s economic afflictions, Macdonald’s National Government secured the support of an astonishing 67 percent of the voting public. A huge number of these voters were young working-class women, participating electorally for only the second time since the franchise was finally given to all British women over the age of twenty-one in 1928.
That the offer of national unity, over class division, had proved irresistible to so large a chunk of the female electorate was enough to make even dyed-in-the-wool conservative politicians sit up and take notice. In 1931, to the utter consternation of their menfolk, women voters had proved to have minds of their own.
It was a lesson that the New Zealand National Party, formed in the year following Labour’s electoral triumph of 1935, could hardly fail to keep at the front of its mind. After all, it was women voters who had kept National out of power until it undertook to leave Labour’s welfare state intact, and who, weary of post-war controls and shortages, had seated National on the Treasury Benches for the first time in 1949.
Most of all, however, it was women voters who, like their British sisters twenty years earlier, had voted for national unity, over trade union militancy and class war, in the snap-election called by National to validate its handling of the bitter 1951 Waterfront Lockout. National’s share of the popular vote, at 54 percent, secured its most emphatic victory, ever.
Not all women were prepared to break ranks from their families’ deeply ingrained electoral preferences. Indeed, most women, like most men, voted the same way as their fathers and mothers, brothers and sisters, husbands and wives. But, enough of them voted against the familial and marital grain to give National the electoral edge it had been seeking since Labour, with 55 percent of the popular vote, had so decisively shifted the political dial in 1938. Between 1949 and 1984, a period of 35 years, Labour would spend just six years in office.
That long period of National Party electoral dominance was aided by the slow decay and demoralisation of both the New Zealand trade union movement and the Labour Party. The heroic component of the movement, the cream of the nation’s working-class, had been comprehensively defeated and dispersed by the National Government in 1951.
Their defeat could not have been secured without the complicity of the Federation of Labour, whose leaders were happy to see the most radical (and democratic) unions, thorns in their sides for many years, humbled. Not that the “moderate unionists” – as National called them – were unaware of just how comprehensively they had been co-opted by the Right. Twenty years hence, John Lennon would argue that “a working-class hero is something to be”. These guys knew that they weren’t.
What’s more, the impression grew in the minds of at least some working-class men that at least some of the working-class women they rubbed shoulders with also knew that there wasn’t much of the hero left in them.
Increasingly, a crass economism, “bread and butter issues”, came to define the mission of both the trade unions and the Labour Party. Throughout the golden economic weather of the long post-war boom it was enough to keep the wolves of doubt from the door – even if the post-war prosperity, upon which the whole, delicate, socio-political compromise rested, was claimed – and acknowledged – as the National Party’s achievement. Upward social mobility, every aspiring working-class mum’s secret hope for her kids, had become the Right’s most potent promise. They were the heroes now.
Sullen, unadventurous, politically-conventional, and materialistic – that is what so many of New Zealand’s working-class men had become. Kiwis may have joked about being a nation devoted to “Rugby, Racing, and Beer”, but the view from where working-class women were now positioned offered little to laugh at. They chafed for change, for something better. If not for themselves, then for their sons and – why not? – their daughters, too.
In the 1970s and 80s those sons and daughters – especially the daughters – would re-energise and redefine the New Zealand Left. But, across the comfortable, but decidedly unheroic, 1950s and 60s, “National Mum” and “Labour Dad” would continue to cancel each other out … almost.
This essay was originally posted on The Democracy Project substack on Friday, 4 October 2024.
14 comments:
Seems to me, that those who lead the labour movement tended to be the relatively well-paid/skilled. My father had a trade, my mother essentially operated a sewing machine, although that was skilled it tended to be regarded as low status.
But what happened to those well-paid skilled jobs for men? Roger Douglas and his minions managed to reduce them, and of course technology is taking care of much of the rest. Many of them were forced to become contractors or "entrepreneurs", the rest are been reduced to unskilled labour.
Which means the former are more likely to be swayed by economic arguments from the right and the latter may be less likely to vote or get involved in politics?
On the other hand relatively skilled and well-paid jobs for women – like nurses – have expanded. So it's not entirely surprising that many of the leaders on the left are now women.
Note that in Britain, men voted to the Left of women as late as 2010. A spectacular example was February 1974 - the Tories won women by 8% and Labour won men by 8%, so you wound up with essentially a tie.
(One might hypothesise that you're dealing with male concern about wages, and female concern about inflation).
But that has very much changed. Economics has given way to culture war.
Perhaps, considering the recent existential threat, it's not surprising that the post war years were marked by a feminine rightward political shift.
Men and women tend to see the world quite differently largely due to biological/evolutionary reality. When the female propensity toward compassion is at odds with their need for security they will fight for security. The mother bear syndrome; loving nurturer becomes savage defender.
The most safe and secure (some would say pampered) female cohort, ensconced in their leafy suburbs tend strongly left. Women in crime ridden neighbourhoods not so much.
The US Dems are, therefore, desperately downplaying the threats they have ushered in with their suicidal policies of porous borders and lax law enforcement. The Republicans are highlighting those threats.
Here's a great example: Border Czar, Border Czar sung to the tune of NZ's OMC's How Bizarre. Sounds up. https://x.com/i/status/1840055614967345259
I recall a comment from my mother about 50 years ago. She was quoting a rather bitter forecast by a Labour supporter about the time of the 1935 election. I have half an idea the person who made this remark was a woman:
'They came in their rags to vote us in; they'll come in their cars to vote us out.'
She - or he - was not wrong!
Cheers,
Ion A. Dowman
Although many women are now part of the work force they still IMO, have more of a social conscience than men as a general rule. I believe in recent times Labour has given the impression it cares for the underprivileged and beneficiaries , and so they are more likely to get a bigger share of the female vote. I'm happy to be corrected if I am wrong. For me, the one reason National suffer unnecessarily in the polls at times, is that they don't seam to attempt to have at least one policy that competes with labour, that would give the impression they had a soft spot for our underprivileged. In our present economic climate their tunnel vision toward economic recovery is understandable, but even in better times their ideology prevents them from believing anybody is being hard done by. IMO if National showed a little heart at times their share of the vote would increase, largely made up of the swing female vote. Chris's reflection of the importance of both male and female voting trends in by gone days, still applies. Sometimes political parties can't see the wood for the trees. Labour has always had difficulty in realising how important a good economy is, and National hasn't realised that some social equality would see them get more of the vote , many of that vote being women. Mum National is worth another look.
GS:
Seems to me, that those who lead the labour movement tended to be the relatively well-paid/skilled. My father had a trade, my mother essentially operated a sewing machine, although that was skilled it tended to be regarded as low status.
I'm oddly more familiar with the British set-up for family reasons... but the divide within the union movement was traditionally between skilled and unskilled. The so-called Aristocracy of Labour on one hand - in Britain, the Electricians' Union were notoriously right-wing - and the likes of the coal-miners on the other.
7 and a half cents doesn't mean a hell of a lot,.. doesn't mean a thing ... but I figured it out says the song and in 5 years it is useful (if not eaten up by inflation).
The Pyjama Game turned union consciousness raising into something hopeful and collective. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D_xSdoWt7v0&list=PLd4pAVEFIJ3GHxhWkoyPKuCYG_uTkEnHA&index=5
A brighter song than Joe Hill - Paul Robeson https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0jAav7ZgHk (24 secs adverts up front approx)
The most safe and secure (some would say pampered) female cohort, ensconced in their leafy suburbs tend strongly left. Women in crime ridden neighbourhoods not so much.
Oh dear.
1. This is New Zealand, not the USA. The leafy suburbs vote for your lot. Not the Left. Along those lines, this is still New Zealand, not the USA, so it's your lot pushing for immigration (to keep wages down), not the Left.
2. Crime (really a stand-in issue for ethnicity) is a fetish of the Upper North Island. The rest of us are much more preoccupied with cost of living.
"The US Dems are, therefore, desperately downplaying the threats they have ushered in with their suicidal policies of porous borders and lax law enforcement. "
Given that Biden has intercepted/returned more migrants in his term then Trump did in his whole four years, I somehow doubt this. Sorry David, you're gullible again. But of course Laura Norder is a knee-jerk Conservative go to I guess.
What on earth does that mean greywarbler? Perhaps you might be better suited to mowing the lawn? 😇
Advertiser Glass Ceiling
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Some analyses of gendered-voting in New Zealand
Part One of Two comments
First, my own analysis from the 1990s ... influenced by historian Miles Fairburn's interest in the sociology of party support at 20C New Zealand general elections, I conducted a kind of mini-me version of Erik Olssen's huge on-going Caversham project at Otago Uni ... in my case, I analysed both the class & sex basis of the second round vote in the Wellington Suburbs & Country electorate at the 1911 general election ... where the conservative Reform candidate & the Independent Labour Party candidate ran off against each other after the 2 centrist Liberal candidates had been eliminated in the first round (forcing erstwhile Liberal voters to swing either Left or Right ... or stay at home) ... I didn't employ any sophisticed ecological statistical techniques but I did find clear evidence that suburbs & polling booth catchment areas with more women voters strongly tended to have lower 2nd round Labour votes than those areas dominated by men ... 2 examples that come to mind are Miramar & Kaiwharawhara -both had very similar class profiles (strongly working-class) but they differed on both their main industry of employment (Miramar - the Gas Works / Kaiwharawhara - Railways) & their sex/gender profile (Miramar dominated by single working class men / Kaiwharawhara populated by an unusually large group of single women - especially unmarried - spinsters & widows).
Second a few years later, another of Fairburn's student's analysed the gender gap in Liberal vs Reform voting 1893-1919 ... She found that while a majority or plurality of both sexes preferred the Liberals throughout the 90s & early 1900s, women were more evenly-divided with men more likely to vote for the centrist Liberals & less likely to support conservative Reform than women. The pattern, she found, reversed after 1911 (suggesting Massey was propelled into government by a swing that was largely male-driven) ... She only alluded to the 1919 Labour vote in a footnote but suggested women were mildly more likely than men to support Labour at its first election as a large united party ... I personally have some doubts on the latter finding - not only does it go against received wisdom & my own Wellington Suburbs analysis - it also starkly contrasts with sophisticated statistical analyses in Britain that suggest women there were much more likely than men to vote Tory after full enfranchisement in 1928 ... but she could be right - I don't discount her findings ... looking through mainstream New Zealand newspapers in the 1920s, though, there does seem to have been a concerted attempt to scare women voters from voting Labour ... Labour often depicted in cartoons as axe-wielding homicidal maniacs - usually cast as wild-eyed colonial boys with huge unruly beards, bulging eyes & an axe in one hand ... I can easily imagine timid older spinsters being frightened by unskilled working class men.
Part Two of Two comments
...
Third fast forward to the earliest polling conducted in New Zealand ... Even before Baxter's Ballad of Calvary Street was composed, enterprising university-based political scientists managed to carry out a smattering of pre-election polls in individual electorates ... the first was in Wellington's Mt Victoria seat in 1949 ... and there were at least two more, one in 1957 (by R S Milne in Wellington Central) & another in 1960. They chose highly marginal seats on the basis that (given their limited resources) these could be considered rough approximations of the nation as a whole. Austin Mitchell also conducted a series of polls in various Christchurch & Dunedin electorates through the 1960s, looking at major issues & demographic divides ... can't remember the specific details of the others, but I know that Milne's 1957 poll both confirmed & negated Baxter's depiction ... women were indeed more likely than men to vote National & less likely to vote Labour ... but he found that the difference was largely down to single people - single women far more likely to vote National than anyone else & single men far more likely to choose Labour ... married couples were much closer to each other in their political sympathies (albeit married men still slightly more Labour-leaning than married women) ... most kids growing up during that era, therefore, would've had mums & dads voting the same way - although National Mum / Labour Dad couples would've certainly outnumbered the reverse ... and the evidence suggests unmarried aunties & uncles were likely to vote for the Blue & Red teams respectively.
Fourth the very sophisticated analyses of Jack Vowles & his team at Waikato & Auckland universities from the 80s show that women continued to support the Nats more than men through the 60s & 70s and right up to the early 80s - at which point things began to reverse. From the 1984 election onwards, women have favoured Labour & the Left more than male voters - at times (eg during the Clark Govt) by a clear margin, at other times (eg during the Key Govt) only very marginally.
Doubt is the best response to imagining what individuals who have long passed thought. Let alone gross generalisations. For someone who may have sympathy for the common man, Chris, you could try to be as even handed as Thomas Carlyle. Who wasn't as egregious a twister of gross generalizations about the unliterary masses as D.H. Lawrence, but kinder than you.
D.H. Lawrence, in 'Kangaroo', traduced returned soldiers (WWI) as Fascists.
He, along with many other bien pensants of 'The Left', who feared this counterforce to their scorned inanities, had nothing good to say about them. When they were all safely dead, the history got brought out, relabelled and given a nice coat of modern day paint.
Are you doing the same?
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