Julia Gillard’s Rise Marks the Triumph of Machine Politics Over Feminism
In 1963, a senior Australian government official, A.R. Taysom, deliberated
on the wisdom of deploying women as trade representatives. “Such an appointee
would not stay young and attractive forever [because] a spinster lady can, and
very often does, turn into something of a battleaxe with the passing years [whereas]
a man usually mellows.”
On International Women’s Day 2012, such primitive views are worth recalling;
but what has happened to modern feminism? Why is it so bereft of its political,
indeed socialist roots that any woman who “achieves” within an immoral
system is to be admired? Take the rise of Julia Gillard as Australia’s
first female prime minister, so celebrated by leading feminists such as writer
Anne Summers and Germaine Greer. Both are unstinting in their applause of Gillard,
the “remarkable woman” who on 27 February saw off a challenge from
Kevin Rudd, the former Labor prime minister she deposed in a secretive, essentially
macho backroom coup in 2010.
On 3 March, Greer wrote in the Sydney Morning Herald that she “fell in
love with” the “matter-of-fact” Gillard long ago. Omitting entirely
Gillard’s politics, she asked, “What’s not to like? That she’s
a woman, that’s what. An unmarried, middle-aged woman in power – any
man’s and many women’s nightmare”.
That Gillard might be a nightmare to the Aboriginal women, men and children
whom this quintessential machine politician has abused and blamed for their
impoverishment, while implementing punitive and racist measures against their
communities in defiance of international law, is apparently not relevant. That
Gillard might be a nightmare to refugees detained behind razor wire, children
included, in places that are “a huge generator of mental illness”,
according to Australia’s ombudsman, is of no interest.
That Gillard has pledged to keep Australian soldiers in Afghanistan indefinitely
and that the overwhelming majority of those killed or wounded has happened during
her period as prime minister, is beside the point. Gillard’s feminist distinction,
perversely, is her removal of gender discrimination in combat roles in the Australian
army. Thanks to her, women are now liberated to kill Afghans and others who
offer no threat to Australia, just like their comrades in “hunter-killer”
units currently accused of massacring civilians. In ending the “cultural
and other taboos that have kept women from combat roles in the past”, wrote
Summers, Gillard has ensured that “Australia will again lead the world
in a major reform”.
The devotion of this new “feminist icon” to imperial war is impressive,
if strange. Referring to the dispatch of Australian colonial troops to Sudan
in 1885 to avenge a popular uprising against the British, she described the
forgotten farce as “not only a test of wartime courage, but a test of character
that has helped define our nation and create the sense of who we are”.
Invariably flanked by flags, she makes her point well.
And the point is that celebration of this kind of politician, regardless of
gender, has nothing to do with feminism. On the contrary, it is complicity in
some of the wickedest crimes of our age. It was Margaret Thatcher who ordered
the sinking of the Belgrano, with the loss of 323 young Argentinean conscripts,
and rejoiced. It was the outspoken British feminist MP Harriet Harman, along
with other Labour feminists known as “Blair’s Babes”, who supported
the invasion of Iraq and stood cheering one of its principal war criminals.
In the west, “glass ceilings” remain the issue-of-choice of bourgeois
feminism. How many women who “make it” in politics speak out against
the machine, reaching down to women left behind? How many resist the addiction
of vanity to power and the media? How many use their platforms, to analyse and
expose the psychopathic militarism and its industries of death and lies that
contaminate our political, cultural and media life and are the source of so
much violence against women in stricken, faraway countries, if not against women
at home? Who spoke out against Julia Gillard’s junket to Israel in the
wake of the massacre of 1400 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, and
her unctuous support for their killers? Where in the coverage of politics are
the principled voices of women such as Medea Benjamin, Arundhati Roy and the
bravehearts of the Rawa women in Afghanistan?
Hillary Clinton was applauded by famous feminists for her support for the west’s
invasion of Afghanistan to “liberate women from the Taliban”. No matter
that this was never the reason; no matter that tens of thousands were killed
and maimed as a consequence. In her 2008 campaign for the White House, Clinton,
supported by feminists such as Anne Summers, boasted that she was prepared to
“annihilate” Iran.
Here in Australia familiar distractions apply: the same insidious corporate
PR aimed mostly at women and the young that says personal identity is the limit
of politics; the same organised forgetting of people’s history and any
notion of class and our servitude to an undemocratic elite.
Yet, Australian feminism has an especially proud past. With New Zealanders,
Australian women led the world in winning the vote. During the slaughter of
the first world war, Australian women mounted a uniquely successful campaign
against a vote for conscription. A poster declared illegal in several states
was headed “The Blood Vote” and showed a defiant woman placing her
vote in the ballot-box rather than, “that I doomed a man to death”.
On polling day all but one of Australia’s political leaders urged a “yes”
vote. They lost. A majority followed the women. Such is true feminism.
Read more by John Pilger
- The New Propaganda Is Liberal – March 14th, 2013
- WikiLeaks is a rare truth-teller. Smearing Julian Assange is shameful – February 17th, 2013
- The Real Invasion of Africa Is Not News, and a License To Lie Is Hollywood’s Gift – January 31st, 2013
- As Sanctions Hit Iran’s Most Vulnerable, the Man Who Dared to Feed Sanction-Starved Iraq Remains in Prison – November 9th, 2012
- The Life and Death of an Australian Hero, Whose Skin Was the Wrong Colour – October 4th, 2012





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