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Women MPs reveal death threats, bullying and harassment

Newsroom Wellington, December 12, 2018

Women MPs spoke aboutbullying, harassment and other misconduct during a public panel discussion on ‘125Years of Suffrage: Reflections on Women in New Zealand Politics – Past, Presentand Future’ as part of the 2018 New Zealand Political Studies AssociationConference at Victoria University of Wellington.

Death threats

Labour’s Ruth Dyson spoke about receiving death threats, as did the Greens’ Golriz Ghahraman, who remembered someone saying: “It’s time to load our shotguns.”

New Zealand First’s Jenny Marcroft was at a politicians’ dinner where she was told to take her top off.

An external review of bullying and harassment of MPs and staff at Parliament, ordered by Speaker Trevor Mallard, is currently under way, as is an internal review by the National Party in the wake of allegations against its former MP Jami-Lee Ross.

National MPs on ‘issues’

During the panel discussion, National MP Jo Hayes, co-chair of the Commonwealth Women Parliamentarians New Zealand group, talked about “the issues that have been going on.”

“I tell you, now, within the (National) caucus, women have come in behind each other. We have become tight … And the men in our Caucus, they sit there and look at us and they know that every single one of them is under our watch. Because they can’t do that to us. We won’t let it happen.”

Dyson is now her Party’s Senior Whip but in previous governments “had a few portfolios where engagement with the public wasn’t always the most favourable.”

Physical harassment

As well as death threats, she experienced, “quite a lot of physical harassment”.

“It does not only happen to women but women are more likely to be the target; men are less likely to attack other men,” she said.

It’s not an easy thing to change, she said, but women “cannot allow this to be another barrier. We just can’t. Stand up, call it out, stick together”.

Ghahraman, Iranian-born and a former child asylum seeker, received support not only from Kiwis but from all around the world when in 2017 she was the first refugee to be elected to the New Zealand Parliament.

Time for shotguns

With the support, though, “came an outpouring of threats – anything from ‘What right do you have to criticise our government, you should be grateful?’ to ‘You should have been left to die’ to ‘It’s time to load our shotguns’. And the threats have continued.”

Threats and verbal attacks come both from people “fearing that I might be a terrorist cell very ineffectively trying to bring down Western civilisation through the back benches of the Green Party” and from “Iranians and Muslims and people who feel that I am letting that team down.”

“The overwhelming majority do not relate to policies, but occur when I appear to be confident – it gets taken as being smug.” She said.

Ms Ghahraman said, “Some of our messages have to change when we talk to women about political participation. We tell them often to ‘lean in’’ to just put themselves forward, to smash that glass ceiling, and I don’t think it’s safe in a lot of circumstances to keep telling women as individuals to do that.

“It is almost Gaslighting

“I think it is almost gaslighting. It is almost telling women they are not where they need to be at that decision-making table because they have not put themselves forward. But I cannot in good conscience tell some of the young women that come up to me in tears because they are so tearful to see someone like them from a refugee background or from a migrant background in (Parliament), I cannot tell them to put themselves on the line to receive the kind of threats I get.

“We have to change the system and we have to change the culture that is the barrier to women putting themselves forward. Of course, we have to encourage each other and we have to stand with each other as we do more and more put ourselves forward, but that can’t be the only thing. Because it isn’t safe. And we know that.”

Global and national

 Marcroft had recentlybeen at the annual general meeting of the global Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU), whereattendees had received the results of a study based on interviews with 81 women MPs and 42 women members ofparliamentary staff from 45 European countries.

She said, “85.2% of female MPs who took part in the Survey said that they had suffered psychological violence in the course of their term in office – 85.2%. Do our statistics in New Zealand match that? … 46.9% had received death threats, threats of rape or beating; 58.2% had been the target of online sexist attacks on various social networks; 67% had been the target of comments relating to their physical appearance or based on gender stereotypes; 24.7% had suffered sexual violence; and 14.8% had suffered physical violence.

“If more women knew this is what Parliamentarian women faced, working in this role, that would be a huge barrier. So we need to do something about it. We need to look and see what is going on in New Zealand, what is happening in our Parliament, what is happening to our women parliamentarians”.

Ms Marcroft said: “I recently had a situation where I was told to take my top off. It was at a casual dinner with other politicians and at one end of the table somebody told me, ‘Take your top off!’ I was like, ‘Did I hear that wrong?’ The next time it was said to me across the table, I was, ‘I’m pretty sure I heard that.’

“A male member of Parliament sitting next to me looked at me and because I didn’t react; he didn’t react. He didn’t jump in there and say ‘Oi!’ and call out that behaviour. But what he did do was we talked about it the next day and he had written down in his notebook what the incident was, who made the comment, time, date, all of that. So he’s got that information should I ever choose to proceed with it.”

Ms Hayes said that she had read the IPU survey.

“And is it different here in New Zealand? No, it’s not. It’s not different.”


Green Party MP Golriz Ghahram
Picture from Party Website

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