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Friday, February 1, 2013

Courageous women make for better politics

Perceptions by Gerry Warner
Would the world be a better place if women were in charge of politics? This is not an idle question, especially here in Canada where we now have five provincial female premiers.  (Funny that feminists aren’t dancing in the streets over this, but we won’t go there.)
To get serious again, and I do mean serious, I raise this question in light of three courageous women in the news lately that should be an inspiration to all of us, female and male alike.
Let’s start with former American Congress woman Gabrielle “Gabby” Giffords, who this week testified in favour of stronger gun control laws in the US having been almost murdered two years ago by a demented gunman in Tucson. Speaking in a quavering but firm voice to a Senate investigating committee, she spoke only 72 words but those 72 words resonated across a country that is being literally torn apart by millions of Americans and their paranoid insistence they have a Second Amendment right to carry weapons and use them in any murderous way they see fit. The Second Amendment, of course, referred to an armed militia and not the crazed individuals who have assassinated presidents, rock stars and ordinary people too numerous to count.
“Too many children are dying. Too many children,” Giffords said. “We must do something. It will be difficult, but the time is now. . . Be bold.” Her brief, but powerful speech was over in a few seconds and then the heroic, partially blind survivor of  yet another American shooting tragedy was led off the stage by her astronaut husband Mark Kelly who pleaded for tougher background checks in a bellicose country that numbers at least 300 million privately owned guns within its borders.
Then there is Pakistani teenager Malala Yousafzai, shot in the head and almost killed by the Taliban last year for fighting for the rights of Pakistani girls to attend school, and now returning to hospital to have a titanium plate placed in her head to replace a piece of skull shot away during the attack. Yousafzai plans to keep the piece of skull blasted away by the Taliban during the gruesome shooting, according to a surgeon quoted in a New York Times article Jan. 30. “(She) wishes to keep it, as a memory I guess,” he said of the courageous 16-year-old, who intends to return to Pakistan and continue her struggle against the Taliban who have vowed to attack her again.
Words fail to describe that kind of courage.
Then there is British Columbia, where politics is often described metaphorically as a “blood sport” even though the blood, thank God, isn’t real. But this doesn’t belie the fact that BC is still a dangerous place to practice politics. Yet, despite this, Surrey Mayor Dianne Watts committed an act of political courage last week the likes of which this retired reporter hasn’t seen in 30 years.
At 2 a.m., after a marathon public hearing over a controversial casino application, Watts cast the deciding vote rejecting the casino bid even though her own council was bitterly divided over the issue and she herself had appeared to favour it earlier. "Fundamentally, is it the right thing to do, to take it from one community and force it into another that doesn't want it? The answer to that question is no," Watts said according to the Peace Arch News. In listening to the public, especially young people strongly opposed to the gambling hall, and going against her fellow councillors and no less than Deputy Premier and Gaming Minister Rich Coleman, who phoned two Surrey councilors prior to the vote in a heavy-handed attempt to squelch opposition to the project, Watts showed a gutsy display of integrity and courage seen all too rarely in B.C. politics. Some are saying she may be the next leader of the Liberal Party in BC if the party losses badly in the May election as many are expecting. Regardless of that, it’s immensely refreshing to see a BC politician putting the public interest ahead of the private interest for a change.
Brave women! All three of them. And again I suggest the world would be a better place if more women like these played a bigger role in politics.
  
Gerry Warner is a retired journalist and a Cranbrook City Councillor. His opinions are his own





 
       

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