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Women power on rise despite global setbacks

Looking at current developments around the world, a woman might feel inclined to despair. This year, once again, no woman is going to get a shot at the top political job in the US.

Women power on rise despite global setbacks
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In Afghanistan, the agreement with the Taliban means women there face a return to the darkest of days. And in Europe, opposition from male heads of government scuppered plans by European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, to appoint equal numbers of men and women to her Commission.


All over the world, it is still rare to find a woman occupying a top political position. So rare, in fact, that whenever a woman does make it, as Sanna Marin did recently in Finland, it is cause for media celebration. Not only is Marin a woman — she’s also young. Worldwide, most parliaments still get away with having a minority of female lawmakers, even though parliament is supposed to reflect society.


Even the most powerful woman in the world, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, has failed to exercise her authority in her home country of Germany to give women more influence in her own political party, the CDU. Introducing a quota would have made this a structural, and thus permanent, change. It should, therefore, come as no surprise that her party colleague Friedrich Merz, who is very keen to become the next German chancellor, is now publicly complaining of “discrimination” against men, by which he means the introduction of a list of candidates featuring the same number of men and women. And yet, something has changed. There are women who refuse to allow themselves to be politically sidelined. No man can get past them. Women like Greta Thunberg, who put the threat of climate catastrophe irrevocably on the global political agenda. Women like Carola Rackete, committed to the emergency rescue of refugees at sea, and defied Italy’s interior minister. Women like Emma Gonzalez, who is campaigning for stricter gun control laws in the US.


The new political heroines are young, they are angry, and they make things happen — as part of the extra-parliamentary opposition. They are the antidote to men like Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin and Jair Bolsonaro. They want to make a difference, but do not strive for power. And they have had to make personal sacrifices: The hatred directed at them, especially by men, knows no bounds. But it is precisely their ability to take these blows that makes them the bearers of hope for a new and different kind of politics. They are role models for young women all over the world.


It is not so easy anymore to pursue policies that disadvantage women. Even the most dyed-in-the-wool machos at party headquarters know elections can no longer be won without the female vote. Women must be wooed with policies of substance. And with female candidates, too. Because women vote for women — if they are given the choice.


Women need to develop an awareness of their power. And they need to punish politics that fail to take it into account. Consistently. They are obliged to do so by the right to vote — a right for which women fought bitterly for a very long time, and for which they are still having to fight, to ensure that small steps backward don’t become big ones. It is to ensure things move forward — on behalf of women all over the world.

The writer is a journalist with Deutsche Welle

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