CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — For a moment on the floor of Parliament, Australia’s political landscape seemed upside down. Prime Minister Julia Gillard, whose party is widely expected to lose elections next year, was eviscerating the man who seems destined to replace her.
CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — For a moment on the floor of Parliament, Australia’s political landscape seemed upside down. Prime Minister Julia Gillard, whose party is widely expected to lose elections next year, was eviscerating the man who seems destined to replace her.
As opposition leader Tony Abbott sat stony-faced and silent, she ran down a list of comments he had made. She complained he once questioned whether it was a bad thing that men had more power than women in Australian society, and that he had described abortion as “the easy way out.” He once stood beside protesters carrying banners that said “ditch the witch.”
Gillard, who lives with a common-law partner, said she also was offended when Abbott once suggested she should “politically speaking, make an honest woman of herself” by taking the country’s carbon tax to voters.
Given those comments, she said, it was too much when Abbott tried to oust House of Representatives Speaker Peter Slipper over crude and sexist terms Slipper made in text messages.
“I will not be lectured about sexism and misogyny by this man. I will not,” Gillard said. “And the government will not be lectured about sexism and misogyny by this man. Not now, not ever.”
It was a convincing blow against Abbott, who has had trouble appealing to women voters. Gillard’s 15-minute onslaught on Oct. 9 quickly became an international Internet sensation, and pleased many women who thought Australia’s first woman prime minister had long been too quiet on the issue of sexism.
Voters are increasingly favoring her over Abbott, and the popularity of her center-left Labor Party has risen from recent record lows. But the party remains well below the 38 percent support that saw it scrape through elections to form a fragile minority government in 2010, and analysts doubt that her newfound fire will turn around Labor’s prospects.
Abbott later dismissed criticisms as part of a smear campaign.
“The Australian people are sick and tired of the kind of personal attacks that we see again and again from the prime minister and her senior ministers,” Abbott told reporters.
“I’ll leave the personal attacks and the cheap grubby smears to the Labor Party,” he said.
A poll by Sydney market researcher Newspoll, published in The Australian newspaper on Tuesday, found that more than three in four respondents (78 percent) said Gillard’s response to the sexism issue had been “about right,” including 83 percent of women and 72 percent of men. Only 16 percent accused her of overreacting, while 5 percent said she had underreacted.
Voters were more divided over whether Abbott truly had behaved in a sexist way toward Gillard recently: Most Labor Party supporters said he had; most backers of Abbott’s conservative coalition said he hadn’t.
The poll was based on a random telephone survey of 1,218 voters nationwide on the preceding weekend. It had a 3 percentage point margin of error.
Newspoll CEO Martin O’Shannessy said he does not expect Gillard’s speech to have a lasting impact on the political landscape.
“It may have had some impact, but my sense is that it’s been a very divisive influence and only entrenched the views of people on both sides,” O’Shannessy said.
Economou expects Abbott’s coalition will win the next election convincingly, but blames Abbott’s poor strategies for allowing Labor back in the game.
The Labor Party has been hobbled by its approval of an unpopular carbon tax on major polluters that took effect in July — a tax that Gillard had previously vowed not to introduce. But the effects of the tax on the cost of living have so far fallen short of Abbott’s dire predictions.
Abbott has branded it a “great big tax on everything” and warned that it would have an “almost unimaginable” impact. Inflation rose by 1.4 percent in the three months since July 1.
“The problem for Abbott at the moment is that all his tactics are backfiring on him really badly,” Economou said. “He’s really lucky that there’s no alternative to him in the party.”
Abbott, who turns 55 on Sunday, is a former journalist and one-time seminarian who gained a Rhodes Scholarship through his boxing prowess. He has led the Liberal Party since 2009, when he deposed Malcolm Turnbull by a single vote of party lawmakers.
Turnbull, Australia’s richest lawmaker and a former merchant banker, remains popular with the public but is loathed by many party colleagues.
“A lot will depend on the extent to which the Liberal Party room panics,” Economou said. “If I was in the Liberal Party room, I would be saying: ‘Look, just hold firm, because the indications are that the government will be defeated.’”
Gillard, a 51-year-old former law firm partner, is Australia’s first woman and first atheist prime minister, as well as the first to live with a common law partner.
She also leads the country’s first minority government since World War II. The compromises and deals she has been forced to make to keep independent and Greens lawmakers in her coalition are seen by many Australians as weakness or expedience, but her speech against Abbott may have tempered those perceptions.
Kirsty McLaren, an Australian National University researcher of feminism in Australia, said that although many women welcomed the speech, it had been risky for Gillard to deliver.
“Many women are familiar with the fact that complaining about sexism is often ineffective or just leads to further criticism,” McLaren said. “Gillard’s speech was a long time coming and I think long overdue.”
McLaren said degrading cartoons of Gillard and criticisms of her dress and figure reflect expectations that women be judged by their appearance.
She added that the speech resonated for many Australian women who are “feeling increasingly frustrated — whether they agree with her policies or not — by the level of contempt directed to Julia Gillard.”