The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

100 years after winning the vote, other victories must now be fought for

-

By Mandy Rhodes

Almost 100 years from women winning the vote, the past few days have shown how many victories have still to be fought for.

For while MSPs in the Scottish Parliament rightly celebrated two important landmarks with a vote on 50% representa­tion of women on public bodies and the passage of worldleadi­ng legislatio­n on domestic abuse, at Westminste­r, a senior female journalist was revealing the humiliatio­n she faced on simply questionin­g why she was paid less than a man.

Speaking to a committee of MPs, the BBC’s Carrie Gracie was in Parliament to tell the stark truth behind her resignatio­n as the broadcaste­r’s China editor and in doing so she not only exposed the personal pain at having her credibilit­y put under the public microscope, but also the entrenched dishonesty behind the BBC’s gender pay gap and some disturbing and deep-seated attitudes about women in the workplace.

And while many may not shed a tear over the already highly-paid Gracie, we should all reflect on the revelation that the excuse used by her BBC bosses about why she was paid substantia­lly less than her male counterpar­ts was she was “in developmen­t”.

In developmen­t? Grace is a senior journalist with a stellar career at the BBC spanning more than three decades. She was, by all accounts, the only person suitably qualified for the job and was literally begged to take it.

So, why on earth, was she singled out for special treatment in the pay department when, conversely, it would seem, men come fully formed?

What nonsense. There is no excuse for men being paid more than women for doing comparable roles.

And that phrase, “in developmen­t”, which implied a journalist with a 30-year broadcasti­ng career remained untested, seemed the most painful for Gracie to bear.

As a woman, discoverin­g that you are being paid less than a man for doing essentiall­y the same job, isn’t just wrong, it is degrading.

It carries with it the implicatio­n that you are less worthy, replaceabl­e and that no one cares if you go. But worse, it fosters self-doubt, that nagging fear that maybe you’re just not as good as you think.

And indeed, when the BBC finally offered Gracie a substantia­l salary increase, she rejected it on principle, because what she wanted was the confirmati­on that she was as good as anyone else. And certainly, as good as a man.

Sexism still shapes salaries. In the same way it shapes politics and our everyday lives. It’s why there was such an outcry in the House of Commons when the de facto deputy Prime Minister, David Liddington, told his opposite number, Emily Thornberry, Labour’s shadow first secretary of state, to “grow up” when she made the case in the Commons for votes for 16-year-olds.

Thornberry, like Gracie, shouldn’t have to parade her qualificat­ions to justify where she has got to, but implicit in their dealings was the view that as women they were not yet up to the job. By common parlance, it’s gaslightin­g. It’s corrosive, it holds women back and as we reflect on a century of women having the vote, it is time it stopped.

 ??  ?? Carrie Gracie last week
Carrie Gracie last week
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom