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Concerns women's equality is 'going backwards'
Concerns women's equality is 'going backwards'

Yahoo

time08-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Concerns women's equality is 'going backwards'

Three high-profile Welsh women have raised concerns that women's equality could be "going backwards". Research in 2024 showed 47% of people said when it comes to giving women equal rights with men "things have gone far enough in Great Britain". Johanna Robinson, Welsh government advisor on violence against women and girls, said of those she speaks to "a significant proportion of men think gender equality has gone too far". She added although there had been progression and positive change, it had also created anger in some men. A panel of Welsh women spoke to BBC Walescast to mark International Women's Day, which falls on 8 March. Women's health hubs for 'every part of Wales' Diversity backlash: Is 'masculine energy' coming to the UK? How the miners' strike changed the role of women For more than a century, people around the world have marked International Women's Day. The idea to make it an international event came from Clara Zetkin, a communist activist and advocate for women's rights. However, despite acknowledging successes and changes, Welsh women have raised concerns that equality is regressing. Johanna has spoken out previously about her own experience as a survivor. "When I speak to young women I am horrified of their experiences, that actually they're no safer than I was at their age," she said. "One of the things for me that really demonstrates this is speaking to young women about their day to day experiences - like gym culture, and that they choose safe spots or safe times." She said despite the progression made, it had created anger in some men. "In some ways you see that fuelling men, that women are improving and they now feel that gender equality has gone too far." Helen Molyneux is a lawyer and founder of the Monumental Welsh Women Project - a project to help provide statues of real Welsh women in Wales. "I worry that there's this push back against women's rights," she said. "There's almost a bit of hysteria around facts like there are more women doctors than men now or that women are earning slightly more than men in certain age groups." She said attitudes in places like the US and Afghanistan meant women there "have less rights now than their mothers and grandmothers". Sian James played a key role in the support networks surrounding the 1984 miner's strike. Women played a vital role in the dispute, organising food collections, distributions and fundraising, organising pickets and speaking at rallies. Sian was one of many women to join support groups in south Wales, and said the women were "better organisers". "I come from a long line of chopsy women, I'm not ashamed to say that. Chopsy women change the world. "Suddenly in '84, women really were at the forefront, it's very empowering, very liberating." But while she acknowledges there have been changes in women's equality, she is concerned it is not enough. "I am really tired of people telling me to stop being woke. "It's not, it's basic human rights and I'm going to keep fighting for them as long as I possibly can." Research from the World Economic Forum found at the current rate of progress it would take until 2158 to reach full parity - which is roughly five generations from now. All three women could give examples of times in their careers where they had been made to feel uncomfortable because they were women. Sian became a Labour MP for Swansea East in 2005, and told BBC Wales about an interaction that happened to her in Westminster. "I had a big brooch on and somebody said 'oh [you] won first prize in the heifer class have you, at the local agricultural fair'. "That was a member of parliament that said that to me." Johanna said: "I got harassed in my first job when I was washing pots, and then I got harassed later on in life as well." Johanna spoke of when she was harassed at a football match. She said a man sitting behind her repeatedly grabbed her after she had told him to stop. Helen described a time as a young solicitor when she was called a witch. "I was accused of organising a coven because I invited three other female solicitors out for lunch," she said. She also said she was horrified telling her daughter about some of her experiences. "I'm embarrassed to say that I would tell my daughter stories of things that happened and [laugh], because at the time, it was just what you put up with if you wanted to fit in and get on." All three women highlighted the importance of education to ensure men are part of the solution to tackling gender inequality. You can catch up on Thursday's episode of Walescast on BBC Sounds Coercive control to be treated like other domestic abuse offences The women killed by men in Wales since 2020 Curfew - is there a radical fix for violence against women?

Simon Hart: Drakeford dented trust in UK government during Covid
Simon Hart: Drakeford dented trust in UK government during Covid

BBC News

time07-03-2025

  • Politics
  • BBC News

Simon Hart: Drakeford dented trust in UK government during Covid

Mark Drakeford "dented people's confidence" in the UK government during the pandemic, the Welsh secretary at the time has Hart said it was "exactly what you don't want" in a national crisis, telling the BBC Walescast podcast of his "frustration" with the then Labour first "was selecting all the things that worked and claiming them as Welsh government, and then being very public about the things that didn't work, and saying that they were UK government", said the ex-Conservative Welsh government said: "All decisions by Welsh ministers related to Covid-19 were based on evidence and always made in the best interests of Wales." The former Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire MP has published diaries on his time in the UK cabinet, first as secretary of state for Wales under Boris Johnson and then as Rishi Sunak's chief whip, enforcing party "Ungovernable: The Political Diaries of a Chief Whip" Hart makes clear his frustration at the relationship between the two governments, particularly during the Covid -19 also comments on Mr Drakeford's appearance at a Remembrance Day event, calling him a "scruffy old university lecturer with dirty shoes".Hart told Walescast Drakeford was a "very nice man", but "he'd never made any secret" of the fact he was no "massive fan" of said he felt Drakeford helped to create a "false" impression that "nice Mr Drakeford - and he is a very nice man - had all the solutions, and nasty Mr Johnson caused all of the problems"."I thought that was a very lazy politicisation of a very serious situation and I thought Mark Drakeford was party to that," said Hart."It wasn't necessarily about political advantage."The consequence, said Hart, was messaging to the public that was not as clear as it might have been to "minimise the risk of the pandemic causing even more mayhem". Hart said he wrote the book to ask the question "what went wrong?" between December 2019 and July 2024, when the Conservatives went from an 80-seat majority to a general election "drubbing".In a separate interview with BBC Politics Wales, to be broadcast on Sunday, he said "we have to ask ourselves the question, how on earth did this happen?""That is a spectacular fall from grace and, unless we're prepared to look in the mirror and say 'ok let's be serious about what we did well and what we did badly', we will continue to make those mistakes.""I don't think it makes particularly comfortable reading at times", he told "went from comedy to tragedy very quickly, as I went from being patient and well-meaning to irritable and disillusioned at times, if I was honest", he stopped short of saying the Conservative Party was "ungovernable", characterising his account as more of a "description of politics more generally"."Keir Starmer suddenly found he was hitting exactly the same headwinds as we'd hit fairly early on in his tenure," said Hart."Big majority, new government, all of that - yet it was still difficult." 'Bumps in the road' On his time as chief whip, Hart's book contains anonymised and shocking stories of MPs in various compromising positions - including accounts of sexual harassment and visits to brothels."The examples I've put in the book probably occur in other industries too, it's not unique to politics," he said."Perhaps the scrutiny around politics is a little bit more intense."To Politics Wales he said he does not think candidates, MPs and ministers are given "the proper amount of support, training, mentoring, guidance that would be absolutely standard practice in a normal workplace"."They were actually very good people who just hit a lot of bumps in the road. "Had we done enough to help them avoid those kind of catastrophes? "Not always, I don't think we did it that well."The Walescast interview is available on BBC Sounds and the BBC Politics Wales interview will be broadcast on Sunday 9 March 10:00 GMT on BBC One Wales and can then be seen on BBC iPlayer

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