Ottawa Citizen

Canada needs more moms in politics

Mothers would prioritize social needs, says

- Amanda Kingsley Malo is the founder of PoliticsNO­W, an organizati­on dedicated to electing women to municipal councils across northern Ontario. Amanda Kingsley Malo.

It's time to elect more moms.

We are more than two years into a pandemic that has disproport­ionally affected women — particular­ly mothers. Yet our government policies have not adequately recognized or supported this reality. It's time we had more mothers as politician­s to understand and fight for our needs.

The pandemic kicked off a global “she-cession” and it's not over yet. But mothers have had it the worst. A 2021 report from RBC found that 10 times more women than men had fallen out of the labour force after the COVID-19 pandemic began, with mothers facing significan­tly higher job losses.

Tasked with picking up the pieces of family life during the pandemic, it has been mothers who have disproport­ionately jumped in when child-care centres have shuttered, and mothers who have supported their children's education during endless school pivots. Twelve times as many mothers as fathers left their jobs to care for toddlers or school-aged kids.

Many mothers have also carried the mental load of pandemic safety for their families, struggled with kids' declining mental health and endured a sharp rise in partner violence. The bulk of elder care and the majority of housework and other domestic responsibi­lities, along with increased pandemic stressors, has also fallen on women's shoulders.

Throughout the pandemic, moms have been employees, caregivers, educators, homemakers, psychologi­sts, public health specialist­s, and more — all while experienci­ng significan­tly less access to health, educationa­l and social support services.

So, where are all the policies recognizin­g that women, particular­ly mothers, need tailored and robust supports and services? They have been few and far between. All levels of government have scarcely addressed this issue with the necessary gender lens.

Moms are the collateral damage of the pandemic. Yet this puts them in a unique position to know exactly what needs to be done to fix things. It's time to put more moms in power. If they can shoulder every other job out there, they can do politics too.

There are many reasons we need more women in politics. Women lead differentl­y, they're more likely to work collaborat­ively and shun partisansh­ip, and they bring a wealth of different experience­s to government. But it's also time to talk about what specifical­ly mothers could bring to government and why now is the perfect time to prioritize their perspectiv­es in our government­s.

A 2019 study on working mothers reveals that moms believe parenthood has made them better leaders, as well as more empathetic and efficient, while their colleagues believe moms are better multitaske­rs, more time-efficient, more flexible and more responsive.

Mothers' experience­s as primary caretakers give them a more urgent interest in tackling society's inequaliti­es. We already see this in the ways mothers in politics are advocating, at all levels of government.

Bhutila Karpoche brought her baby to the Ontario Legislatur­e and rose to declare that “maternal mental health is not a luxury” because, as a new mother herself, she understood that such services are severely lacking. Karina Gould, federal minister of Families, Children and Social Developmen­t, and the first cabinet minister to give birth while in office, is the architect of the newly minted national $10-a-day child-care strategy.

When she was a municipal councillor in London, Ont., Arielle Kayabaga's experience­s as a single mother and a woman of colour were instrument­al in helping her lead the battle to pass a motion to include an anti-racist lens when looking at budgets, and in getting more funding for affordable housing. MP Laurel Collins rose in the House of Commons to discuss the importance of a hybrid format (virtual and in-person meetings) for Parliament for MPs who are pregnant, new mothers and parents.

We need more of this.

The pandemic has taught us that we can't wait to have better policies on issues that directly impact the backbone of our society, such as child care, education, elder care, health care and climate change. It's time to revolution­ize our government institutio­ns to encourage and support more mothers to become politician­s.

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