Julia Gillard’s rise marks the triumph of machine politics over feminism

As commentators from Germaine Greer to Anne Summers fawn over the hawkish prime minister, John Pilge

As commentators from Germaine Greer to Anne Summers fawn over the hawkish prime minister, John Pilger in Sydney wonders what happened to sisterly solidarity.

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 for ever [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 the writer Anne Summers and Germaine Greer. Both are unstinting in their applause for 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 back-room coup in 2010.

Greer wrote in the Sydney Morning Herald of 3 March that she "fell in love with" the "matter-of-fact" Gillard long ago. Omitting Gillard's politics entirely, 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."

Addicted to vanity

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 been determined to keep Australian soldiers in Afghanistan and that the overwhelming majority of Australian casualties in that country have been killed or wounded during her period as prime minister are beside the point. Her 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 the "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 despatch 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 Argentinian 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 Gillard's junket to Israel in the wake of the massacre of 1,400 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 Rawa
in Afghanistan?

Hillary Clinton was applauded by renowned feminists supporting 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 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.

Blood vote

Here in Australia, familiar distractions apply: the same insidious corporate PR aimed 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 headlined "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. Most followed the women. Such is true feminism.

45 comments

marcella's picture

Murdoch pull the strings like Thatcher. What else do you need to know.

brook boysen's picture

Excellent.

gwyn@ibw.com.ni's picture

Like the USA, most developed, so called democratic societies are now dominated by the middle classes. Middle class women - particularly the political kind - are likely to be just as ambitious, ruthless and self promoting as their middle class male counterparts.

LloydJHart's picture

When is everyone on the left going to realize that it does not matter who you think you voted into power as the head of state. The simple fact is power is at the end of a barrel of a gun and those that have the guns and are willing to kill scare the rest into submission. We will never have true democracy economically and politically until we impose it by force.

So who runs Australia matters not. It will be white supremacist regardless, economically unjust and just another white man's shit hole.

Nixon is Lord's picture

The US state of New Jersey had women voting until the early 1800s; Wyoming let women vote in the 1880s-to attract more women settlers.
And why do you need to automatically admit to your country anyone who just shows up and asks for things? If I came to Pilger's house, would he have to give me stuff?

The Grappler's picture

Hmm - well - you would expect Germies to say that, wouldn't you - as usual without much real thought.

Ahr Julia is living proof that women in 'power' are as heartless as anyone when it comes to wars and such, and as for the 'gender' stuff in combat - well - let's just see how far that luxury thinking goes when a REAL war, and not one of these colonial wars we are having, gets going.

I await the news of an all-woman patrol being ambushed and wiped out. Sheer idiocy, and I fail to see how the Army command would get on-board with this stupidity, which puts us in much the same position that the British army was just before WWI - so used to easy-beat campaigns against half-starved tribesmen that they simply couldn't cope with a real war - with the obvious results.

Can anyone enlighten me on exactly how many women are currently in DIRECT combat roles?

Anyway - - a pretty good rendition of the political malaise of this country at this time - and only (gee, I sound like Smith in 1984) the people (the proles? - gags) can pull us out of it - if they act and vote down the current crop of clowns on BOTH sides.

Dr. Wom Bhatt's picture

@ Danny Lewis

Thanks for the correction on "Labour" vs "Labor" usage for the ALP. It's definitely "Labor".

@ Michael Christie

For the record the "Juliar" tag originated in Oz as a result of Ms.Gillard bringing in a carbon tax ( another "trading item" to benefit the financial markets ) after promising the opposite. Anti-semitic comment ? How so ?

You wrote that my criticism of Ms.Gillard was "anti-semitic, which is confirmed by the global financial conspiracy you hint at".

What conspiracy ? The word is out Michael. There is not so much conspiracy now. There is now much more light in the world. Crimes are now committed in the open without any attempt to hide. How many instances do you need to be shown ? What about the repeal of the Glass_Steagall Act in the US? The WMD argument for invading Iraq. The list of criminal nation state behaviours in William Blum's Rogue State (http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Blum/Rogue_State_Blum.html).

As for pursuing an anti_semitic line I refer you to Jeff Gates, former diplomat and international banker renowned for his tome "Guilt by Association" ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rmExH_Z1nzc).

For the record check out the Encylopaedia Brittanica definition of "Semite" and , in the future, please pause and think before you use the term "Anti-semite". As with your use of "Conspiracy", "Anti-semite" is being used to discount and degrade an argument before that argument's merit is considered.

The Grappler's picture

High Markey - "Reacting immediately, Viet Cong supported by North Vietnamese regulars put the Aussies straight back in their box. "??

The Aussie 1 and 3 RAR, ably supported by US artillery and air, rolled over 2000 NVA/ Main Force VC at Coral/Balmoral in 1968, and put the rest to flight. How is that 'putting us back in the box'?

Daz's picture

"With New Zealanders, Australian women led the world in winning the vote"

Rubbish. Is there no New Zealand achievement or famous person that Aussies will not claim as their own?

Women - all women - got the vote in New Zealand in 1893.
All Australian women were not permitted to vote until 1908, though South Australia was the earliest state to grant universal suffrage in 1895.

The Grappler's picture

On women's voting rights - feminists did NOT win those in Australia or NZ - they were primarily the result of the long and hard work of men more than of women - and remember that universal male suffrage in Australia only arrived in about 1895 or so.

This whole line about 'feminists getting women the vote' is a lie -and remember that in Britain the activities of the suffragettes actually delayed women getting the vote - since the Suffragettes were so bad that women were considered not responsible enough.

No feminist ever got women the vote, educastion, jobs, or anything of the kind - these were the natural outcome of the (once) continually rising social standards and values that we apply in the never-ending search for equality for all - not just - as one said - the 'privileged middle class women'...

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