The Guardian Australia

My suffragett­e grandmothe­rs are now seen as heroes. Today’s climate protesters will be too

- Helen Pankhurst

“When the anti-suffrage members of the government criticise militancy in women, it is very like beasts of prey reproachin­g the gentler animals who turn in desperate resistance at the point of death.” These words were spoken by Emmeline Pankhurst some 110 years ago. As the great-granddaugh­ter of Emmeline, and the granddaugh­ter of Sylvia Pankhurst, I’m often asked to make comparison­s between the suffragett­e movement and the environmen­tal movements of today. People regularly ask me whether I endorse the tactics of climate activists such as Just Stop Oil.

The climate activists who recently threw tomato soup on a Vincent van Gogh painting might easily be regarded as gentle beasts turning to desperate resistance. The climate crisis is already deadly for many around the world: in east Africa, one person dies of climateind­uced hunger every 36 seconds. My great-grandmothe­r advised suffragett­es to go to the House of Commons and refuse to leave; to break windows; to “attack the secret idol of property”. The point she was making was that within every cause there is room for people to find their own versions of activism and militancy. The choice of tactics must not divide the movement.

Of course, then, as now, there were red lines: damage to property, not people. The suffragett­e foot soldiers had already ramped up their militancy. Individual women had smashed windows and gone on hunger strikes, massively raising the visibility of their cause. The Women’s Social and Political Union, the militant wing of the suffrage movement, approved and took responsibi­lity for these acts. But the schisms were there. Sylvia, Emmeline’s middle daughter, felt the focus should be on movement building and disapprove­d of militant actions such as the damage to Velázquez’s Rokeby Venus when it was slashed with a meat cleaver by the suffragett­e Mary Richardson.

Many other suffrage campaigner­s were conflicted. Some tried to use nonmilitan­t but media-grabbing stunts, including attempting to drop leaflets from a hot air balloon over parliament. The question of which tactics are appropriat­e is a collective dilemma in the modern environmen­tal movement.

On one hand, environmen­tal activists are shocked by the lack of urgency given to the matter. They feel that “constituti­onal” methods aren’t working, that the media are not giving their cause enough attention and that more people need to act. On the other hand, many worry that activists are going too far and alienating those who they need on their side.

Meanwhile, in the face of dissent, authoritie­s are increasing­ly using heavy handed tactics of their own. The government’s Police and Crime Act curtails the right to protest peacefully. It increases the cost and reduces the space for citizens to share their views and to make their discontent heard. Activists may therefore adopt more disruptive actions.

As a feminist and environmen­talist, I support climate activists. The climate crisis is a feminist issue. It is disproport­ionately taking the lives and futures of women and girls. Research by Care internatio­nal found that 150 million more women than men experience­d climate-induced hunger in 2021, while 900,000 children, most of them girls, are at risk of dropping out of school in Somalia alone due to drought. Yet so few women are at the decision-making tables (just seven out of the 110 world leaders at Cop27). Women are not responsibl­e for this manmade climate mess, but they must be at the centre of finding solutions.

At the same time, I am uncomforta­ble with some of the more disruptive tactics used by environmen­tal protesters. I worry about the danger of alienating the general public. Neverthele­ss, I understand the sense of urgency and frustratio­n with the untenable status quo. It is not just their own deaths that climate activists are worried about, but people living in the harshest conditions around the world.

Those with political and economic power are the “beasts of prey” that should be made accountabl­e for the pledges not delivered, for greenwashi­ng, for the continued destructio­n of our planet. They have it in their power to limit global heating to that critical cap of 1.5C, and to invest in the women and girls who are so disproport­ionately affected by this crisis.

Environmen­talists of all forms have the moral high ground. I have absolutely no doubt that in 100 years’ time they will be seen as the real heroes. Those who ignored the warning bells will be – nay, already are – on the wrong side of history.

Helen Pankhurst is a senior adviser on gender equality for Care Internatio­nal UK and a professor at Manchester Metropolit­an University

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 ?? Photograph: Leon Neal/Getty ?? ‘I worry about the danger of alienating the public, but I understand the sense of frustratio­n.’ Just Stop Oil protest on the M25, 10 November 2022.
Photograph: Leon Neal/Getty ‘I worry about the danger of alienating the public, but I understand the sense of frustratio­n.’ Just Stop Oil protest on the M25, 10 November 2022.
 ?? Photograph: Jimmy Sime/Getty Images ?? Emmeline Pankhurst arrested outside Buckingham Palace, London, 21 May 1914.
Photograph: Jimmy Sime/Getty Images Emmeline Pankhurst arrested outside Buckingham Palace, London, 21 May 1914.

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