Speaker: Gender quotas (and helping journalists with their maths)
86 Responses
First ←Older Page 1 2 3 4 Newer→ Last
-
-
If we're going levity, then I for one welcome our new Female Overlords.
-
Graeme Edgeler, in reply to
The Spreadsheet had one scenario. 40% party vote in 2014, followed by 42% party vote in 2017. I think I made a pretty good historical argument for why a 40% party vote was unlikely.
-
Felix Marwick, in reply to
I don’t know how we are supposed to judge the ‘merit’ of MPs, but the Green Party puts a lot of women in parliament. How do they do it?
I believe the Greens operate a 60-40 rule. MPs of either gender will constitute no more than 60 percent of the caucus and no fewer than 40%
-
I gave Gower the benefit of the doubt for quite a while, but now he’s been moved to my to my “Duncan Garner Response Protocol”.
Turn the volume down until over, or change the channel or turn the TV off and do something useful.
I did see that story about the 'man-ban' (violating my own protocol)...and I wish I hadn't. It was not the sort of 'journalism' I have any time for.
-
Steve Withers, in reply to
Peter: The Green party list alternates male / female right from the top. As they do not win any local seats the result is 50/50 for gender if Green MPs are even in number and only out slightly if the number of MPs is not even. Their list is also regionally balanced. The rankings overall are also shaped by preferential postal ballot of all party members nationally.
The Greens are arguably the most democratic party in the country. National, on the other hand, is arguably high in the ranking of least democratic. Their local candidates ARE their list and the party HQ ranks them...and gets to pull 5 names out of a hat and rank them wherever they like. It is one of the perversities of the National party 'view' of MMP that they practice the very things they object to most about MMP: party bosses controlling the list rankings and "appointing" people to it.
-
Graeme Edgeler, in reply to
Peter: The Green party list alternates male / female right from the top.
I’ve long thought that the Green Party, in order to be fair to both men and women, should alternate its list like serving in a tennis tie-breaker: e.g. one woman, two men, two women, two men etc (or the other way around)
This would result in there being a 50% chance of equality, and, in the event of an odd number of MPs being elected, a 25% chance of there being an extra man, and a 25% chance of their being an extra woman. Rather than a 50% chance of there being equality, and a 50% chance of there being an extra woman, and no chance of there being an extra man, which is what you get is what you get if you just alternate from the beginning.
-
Brent Jackson, in reply to
I guess they're doing a miniscule bit to help the under-representation of woman in the other parties.
But I too would favour the 1-2-2-2... approach.
-
-
"When the London School of Economics investigated the use of quotas they found that they did not result in unqualified women being appointed. They found that the bar was lifted, not lowered, because the people who were missing out were mediocre men."
-
mark taslov, in reply to
While the ethnic makeup of the people in the article’s photo provides some indication as to the shortcomings of this type of non-intersectional “gender diversity” – this tweet couplet brings the conversation right up to date.
Post your response…
This topic is closed.