The Sunday Post (Dundee)

FORMER PARTY LEADER URGES ACTION TO EASE CRISIS

Former leader of Scottish Labour urges action to curb

- By Mark Aitken POLITICAL EDITOR – Kezia Dugdale

Kezia Dugdale has called for a ban on anonymous social media accounts to tackle the abuse that is discouragi­ng women from entering public life.

The former leader of Scottish Labour, who is now director of the John Smith Centre, based at Glasgow University and launched to promote trust in politics, fears the threat of online harassment is putting women off entering politics.

She said: “What Twitter is doing, from my perspectiv­e, is uniting us and dividing us in equal measure. When you’re on Twitter, you’re forced into a tribe.

“You meet more people like yo u and fewer people who hold different opinions from you. So we become m o re united in our own comfort spaces and less tolerant of people who hold different opinions from us. I think that’s really bad for politics generally.

“One quick fix is to take away some of the very worst of the abuse people face online. But we also have to start working really hard to defend politics as a force for good, to convince those women who are really active in their community to take that extra step and stand for election.

“If you want to change the law, if you want to make your community a better place, if there is a single issue that you feel really passionate about, politics is a way to change that. Let’s tidy up the bad stuff, but let’s also advocate for the good in politics as well.”

According to research, former Labour Shadow Home Secretary Diane Abbott was the victim of almost half of the abuse directed at female MPS on Twitter during the 2017 general election campaign.

Dugdale said: “There’s no doubt that that’s partly because she’s black and partly because she’s a woman. You have misogyny compounded by racial discrimina­tion in Diane Abbott’s case, but misogyny is something that all women in politics face.

“Our country is still structural­ly unequal because politics is still seen as something for middle- aged, middle- class white men. Until that fundamenta­lly changes, and we upset that order so that politician­s look like the country they seek to serve, it is always going to be the case that minorities are targeted.

“Women are a minority in politics, and have been in the Scottish Parliament since 1999, and that minority status is compounded if you dare to be a woman of colour or of a different sexual orientatio­n.”

Dugdale served as a Labour MSP for eight years and two years as party leader.

She said: “I don’t think anyone would have said the head- to- heads between me, Nicola Sturgeon and Ruth Davidson were any less combative than they would have been with three men. So it’s not about saying everybody has to be nicer to each other. What we have to do is disagree better, to tone down the language of politics a little bit, and create more space for people to debate ideas and to compromise.”

Dugdale, who received three death threats in her time in office, described the trolling of her as “relentless”. She said: “I used to say to people the trick is to have a skin that’s thick enough and to let most of it bounce off you but not so thick that you lose the ability to feel or empathise with people.

“If people become immune to people talking about them online, then there is a danger of our politician­s becoming robots. If they lose the ability to feel and empathise with people who

All women in politics face misogyny

Former candidate Leah Franchetti

are struggling, who need the world to be better, that is also going to affect the quality of policies and decisions and the nature of our political debate.

“Getting that balance right is really tricky. But a big part of fixing that is cutting out the worst of the abuse.

“If someone wants to troll other people online, they should have to do it in their own name with a verifiable account, so that when they do go over that line, when their behaviour becomes threatenin­g, then can be held accountabl­e for their actions in the same way that they would be if they screamed at somebody in the street. I’m very aware that abuse on social media is something that is putting people off standing for election.

“I’ve had conversati­ons with potential candidates, right across the political parties, who would make brilliant MSPS.

“But they say to me, ‘ That’s the last thing in the world I’d want to do. Why on earth would I put myself on a public pedestal like that? I can achieve so much in my own community without doing that. Why would I set myself up for abuse?’

“That really worries me because, no matter where you sit in the political spectrum, surely we all want the best possible people to be representi­ng us in parliament.”

Leah Franchetti was ready to run for Holyrood in May but, after suffering an onslaught of online abuse at the 2016 election, withdrew because she could not face another.

The former teacher, who works for the EIS union, says she was reduced to tears by the bile directed at her during her unsuccessf­ul bid to become an MSP for Scottish Labour.

She had been selected to stand again in Glasgow in May but withdrew because she feared any abuse directed at her would also affect her children and new partner.

Her decision has left her feeling guilty but she decided she could not put herself or her family through the online abuse.

Franchetti, 40, had stood in the Highlands, where she grew up, and despite being an experience­d campaigner and believing that politician­s should be subjected to proper scrutiny, she was shocked by the level of vitriolic abuse.

She said: “I just was not prepared for the online abuse that started coming my way when I was selected as a candidate.”

The abuse started after a post on a political blog, and her phone “erupted with notificati­ons”.

Franchetti said: “My phone was just pinging with notificati­ons from any social media platform

I had ever been on. People had gone on to a rate my teacher site. There was a review from when I was a probatione­r teacher in my early 20s, and people were commenting on that.

“People who knew nothing about me were just finding any way to start sending absolute bile. It was shocking to me, I wasn’t ready for it and I just burst into tears. It felt so violating.”

Her ordeal was a significan­t factor in her decision to withdraw as a Scottish Labour candidate for Glasgow Shettlesto­n constituen­cy at the Holyrood election.

Franchetti said: “The pandemic has made me think about things that are important to me in my life, and the online abuse made me think I just can’t face it.

“I feel guilty about that because I do want to encourage more women to be in politics and I think I should do it because other women do it, but at the same time personally I didn’t want to put my family through that just now.”

 ?? Picture Andrew Cawley ?? Former Labour Holyrood candidate Leah Franchetti in Glasgow last week
Picture Andrew Cawley Former Labour Holyrood candidate Leah Franchetti in Glasgow last week
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 ??  ?? Former Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale
Former Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale

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