Attack of the 50 Ft. Women: How Gender Equality Can Save The World!. Catherine Mayer
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Attack of the 50 Ft. Women: How Gender Equality Can Save The World! - Catherine Mayer страница 18

СКАЧАТЬ rather than outright majorities, and deploys multiple checks and balances. German history warns against unfettered power. Even so, Merkel confronted the migrant crisis as Europe’s strongest leader, the only one with political capital. In finally spending that capital, she sought to instill in other European leaders a sense of collective responsibility. This was, as she saw it, ‘a historic test of globalisation’.

      Merkel alone rose to it. She had overestimated Europe’s capacity for solidarity. Her remarks at a press conference after her party’s poor showing in the September 2016 Berlin state elections, widely misreported as a mea culpa, instead restated her convictions. She did regret the phrase ‘we will manage’, which ‘makes many people feel provoked, though I meant it to be inspiring’.

      However, she had followed a humanitarian imperative and a strategy that, despite flaws, bore fruit. Her integration strategy ensured the migrants got German language lessons and fast-tracked work permits, enabling the country to start filling 1.1 million jobs left vacant by an ageing population. These successes, and the falling numbers of migrant arrivals, did nothing to quiet her critics, especially within the ranks of the CDU and CSU. They had never really accepted her; now, they treated her as a liability. Days after the 2017 election, Alexander Mitsch, the leader of a new rightwing grouping within the CDU/CSU, called for Merkel’s resignation. ‘It’s important for there to be new momentum,’ he said. When Merkel’s efforts to form a coalition with two smaller parties foundered, she again got the blame, even though one of the smaller parties walked away. ‘Merkel has no power and no authority,’ opined Die Welt. Yet her international popularity remains largely intact. Women across the world chuckled when Donald Trump refused to shake her hand at their first White House meeting and celebrated her return to power. Ayesha Hazarika, a former Labour party adviser and stand-up comedian, spoke for many when she praised Merkel to a BBC audience: ‘In a world full of demented men like Kim Jong-un, Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin – these crazy man-babies – I’m very glad that Angela Merkel is there. In terms of global leadership, she is a moral authority in a very scary world right now.’

      Hazarika was by no means the only left-leaning woman happy to see Merkel back in Chancellery and to hope she finds a way to survive there. Yet in many parts of the world, female voters are more likely than men to vote for left-of-centre parties. This pattern is true in the US, where the majority of white women who voted for Trump was not as large as the majority of white men who backed him. You can see why that might be. Conservatism is inherently disposed towards maintaining the status quo, and some groups of female voters know this is not to their benefit, not least because of the right’s fondness for downsizing the state at the potential costs of state-sector jobs that employ women and services that support women, plus a tolerance for a wide income spread in a system that relegates more women to the lower tiers. Merkel has persuaded female voters in Germany to buck this trend by appealing across party lines to Social Democrats – and to women. At the 2013 election, 44 per cent of all female voters backed Merkel’s party, compared to 24 per cent for the Social Democrats. In 2017, she lost a chunk of that support but retained some residual goodwill by showing what women can be in a country that until relatively recently in its dominant Western states envisaged only three spheres of female activity: Kinder, Küche, Kirche – children, kitchen, church. Up until 1958, a West German husband could demand his wife’s employer sack her if she neglected the housework. These attitudes were still reflected in the education system Merkel inherited, in which a majority of schools in the west ended at midday so pupils could return home for a cooked lunch. When Merkel first led the Christian Democrats into an election, opponents and colleagues alike asked ‘Kann die das?’ Is she able to do this? ‘With a negative touch,’ says Ursula von der Leyen, Germany’s first female Defence Minister. ‘Nobody is asking any more.’

      This does not mean Merkel’s record on promoting gender equality has been perfect. Like many female leaders, her instinct is to shy away from gender politics. She was uncomfortable with her first portfolio in Helmut Kohl’s government, as Minister of Women and Youth. Germany’s sluggish birth rate rather than any feminist impulse prompted Merkel to introduce a wide range of measures to support working mothers, including the provision of parental leave paid up to 65 per cent of salaries for up to 14 months, guaranteed daycare for children aged one or above, and an expansion of all-day schools. She only reluctantly gave in to deploying quotas to increase female representation on the boards of large German companies. ‘It is pathetic that in more than 65 years of the Federal Republic of Germany, it was not possible for the Dax-30 companies to get a few more women on supervisory boards on a voluntary basis,’ she said. ‘But at some point there had been so many hollow promises that it was clear – this isn’t working.’

      German society has witnessed significant changes. Female participation in the German labour force rose by two percentage points in the decade ahead of Merkel’s first electoral victory and by eight points during her first ten years in government. It would be unwise to claim a direct correlation; many factors will have played a part. Nevertheless, there’s no denying that German women have risen under Germany’s first female leader.

      Theresa May’s elevation prompted crowing in Tory ranks. The Conservatives had notched up a second female Prime Minister before Labour even managed a female party leader. May, Merkel and two other female leaders in Europe, Norway’s Erna Solberg and Serbia’s Ana Brnabić are on the right. Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović belonged to the conservative Croatian Democratic Union party before her election as Croatia’s President. This does not mean rightwing politics promotes better outcomes for women, rather that parties of the left are especially bad at promoting women.

      The paradoxical explanation for this phenomenon is that parties of the left have historically championed gender equality. This means they are often too convinced of their own virtue to recognise their failings. Those failings loosely group into two categories. The first is one of precedence. In their desire to solve all structural inequalities, these parties get caught up in unhelpful binaries of the kind that disfigured the Democratic primaries in 2008 – ethnic minorities or women, class or gender, pensioners or underprivileged youth – reflexively assigning the lowest priority to women even though most forms of disadvantage intersect with being female. Far-left activists aim not to fix parts of the system, but to change the whole system, again stranding women in an endless waiting game. They also mistake optics for action. Amnesty International’s 2015 report on Bolivia noted that the socialist government had set up a Gender Office and Unit for Depatriarchalisation and created a Deputy Minister for Equal Opportunities within the Ministry of Justice and Fundamental Rights, responsible for the advancement of women. However, none of these new institutions had been allocated the resources necessary to be effective. The Equal Opportunities brief, for example, received just 5.3 per cent of the ministerial budget. As the White Queen tells Alice, ‘The rule is jam tomorrow and jam yesterday – but never jam today.’

      Конец ознакомительного фрагмента.

      Текст предоставлен ООО «ЛитРес».

      Прочитайте эту книгу целиком, купив полную легальную версию на ЛитРес.

      Безопасно оплатить книгу можно банковской картой Visa, MasterCard, Maestro, со счета мобильного телефона, с платежного терминала, в салоне МТС или Связной, через PayPal, WebMoney, Яндекс.Деньги, QIWI Кошелек, бонусными картами или другим удобным Вам способом.

/9j/4STERXhpZgAATU0AKgAAAAgACAESAAMAAAABAAEAAAEaAAUAAAABAAAAbgEbAAUAAA СКАЧАТЬ