Irish Daily Mail

Online abuse putting women off political life

NWC call on parties to take action and support female members

- By Cate McCurry cate.mccurry@dailymail.ie

WOMEN are leaving politics or refusing to enter political life over the rise in online abuse targeted at women, it has been claimed.

Claire McGing, of the National Women’s Council of Ireland (NWC), said women are making the decision to drop out of politics while others are being put off running in elections because of the gendered social media abuse.

A report published by the NWC also found that political parties in Ireland are not doing enough to support their political members who are subjected to abuse.

The NWC published a social media toolkit for parties to tackle violence against women in politics, and has called for parties to take substantia­l action to support female members.

The toolkit, developed by Valesca Lima and Ms McGing, was developed following a survey with Irish political part

‘Not worth running for election’

ies in how they deal with online abuse. Ms McGing said there is ‘ample global research’ to show that sexist attitudes and genderbase­d violence against women political candidates and politician­s remain a ‘key barrier’ to the achievemen­ts of gender equality in political systems.

‘We do know from academic research that when women experience­d this, it tends to be highly gendered and sexist in its context and in the effect that it has,’ Ms McGing told a conference yesterday. ‘In addition to the emotional and profession­al consequenc­es that online abuse has, women may decide to drop out of politics and other women, if they see that is what elected women are experienci­ng, they may just decide it’s not worth running for election at all.’ Recent research by data scientist Dr Ian Richardson found that between September 2020 and September 2021, women councillor­s in Ireland received eight times more abuse online than their male counterpar­ts.

Research also shows that women in the Seanad face three times more abuse compared to their male counterpar­ts.

‘Given that local government­s and also the Seanad are key pipelines into Dáil Éireann, there is a real concern, and I would say there’s some evidence already around what women are saying, that they will not run for the Dáil on the basis of what they are experienci­ng,’ Ms McGing added. ‘I have had a number of women councillor­s confidenti­ally telling me they will not run again in 2024 as a result of what they’re experienci­ng.’

She added: ‘In terms of political parties, we argue in this toolkit that they are the name gatekeeper­s to political office for women, for all candidates but particular­ly for women in light of their under-representa­tion.

‘We argue that they have a duty to recognise, take concrete steps to address gender-based online abuse, take a zero tolerance abuse to perpetrato­rs if they are in the party fold or party members and to provide support for survivors.’

The NWC survey found that of the seven political parties which responded, all had codes of conduct that could address online threats and abuse.

The seven parties included Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael, Sinn Féin, Labour, Social Democrats and People Before Profit. Ms Lima said, however: ‘We noticed that (the codes of conduct) is addressed only on general terms, and this applies to all by members.

‘So we’ll ask that those policies specifical­ly address abuse towards female party members.’

 ?? ?? Toolkit: Claire McGing from the NWC
Toolkit: Claire McGing from the NWC

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