Women’s Safety Must Not Be a Tool for Racism

Women’s liberation would benefit men. Working class men, at least. The ability of the Bosses to pay women less than men for doing the same work, having the same or even more skills but being denigrated, denied recognition and  prevented from rising-up the management hierarchy, harms everyone…except the bosses. Unequal pay holds down the general pay-rate. Any excuse is used to hold down wages in order to increase profits, including ideas that women are not worth as much as men.

Women’s oppression, the consideration of women as less than men – weaker, more emotional and therefore fickle and untrustworthy – is increasing again in Britain. After a few decades of winning better women’s rights at work and at home, there’s now a push back. And misogyny is the hard end of this – male hatred of women – a political campaign for male supremacy overwhelming the online Manosphere and poisoning young men’s minds.

Sexism doesn’t make sense. If women had the same rights as men, men would be freed from the results of women’s oppression. If we broke the stereotypes assigned to gender roles we could be honest about our emotions, we could share responsibilities, mix our teams and, oh yes, increase the rate of pay for all, setting the bar at the highest common denominator, not the lowest.

Women in the UK still get paid on average of 18% below men’s pay rates for work of the same value. Trade unions still shout about this. The essential priority for campaigners for women’s rights is correctly focussed upon male coercion, sexual abuse and rape. It is estimated that up to 900,000 people across the country experience sexual assault each year, including attempted rape and penetration. Much has been done to strengthen laws against sexual violence and yet it is widespread, less than 3% of reported rapes ending up in a successful prosecution and punishment. 

Predatory abusive men have little to fear. One-in-three women in the UK experience an average of 7-years of domestic abuse at the hands of their partners, statistics that hasn’t changed for the past 50 years. Around 90% of rapes are committed by people known to the victim, often by someone who the survivor previously trusted or even loved. Rapists are usually friends, colleagues, clients, neighbours, family, partners or exes. 

Sexual abuse happens in every community. In England, where more than four out of five of the population are white-skinned, this means that the vast majority of sexual abusers are white men abusing white women. 

Yet a new campaign group, publicised by the Plymouth Herald, is calling for action against Black men. “Women Reclaim The Streets Plymouth” (WRTSP) is claiming that our streets have been made unsafe by immigrants seeking to abuse women. 

WRTSP states “We will feel safer on the Right than the Left always, with rising amounts of illegal undocumented men coming here on boats and the amounts of rapes and murders by these men We Stand (sic) together for closed borders and the illegal undocumented men send (sic) straight back.”

They have no evidence, and as such this is hate speech, a hate crime, promoting fear and racial hostility through the false claim that asylum seekers are responsible for a rising number of rapes. 

They wrongly raise the threat of “stranger danger” when women and children are most likely to be abused by someone known to them. Their propaganda is placing women and children at more risk, intentionally or not, implying that family and friends are always safe.

This outcry against asylum seekers and young refugee men as rapists is being fomented by organised fascists. The misogynists who hate women also hate Black people. The ultra-nationalists framing patriotism as white-supremacy are waving flags to intimidate ethnic minorities. The men in high-viz jackets waving Union jacks with the Reclaim the Streets group outside Theatre Royal last week have amongst them thugs convicted for violence against women. 

These racist groups are planning a series of local protests against refugees, starting next Monday. They threaten to hold more demonstrations outside our primary schools, claiming to “protect our children” and targeting local Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMO) as if they all house illegal refugees. Their sheer ignorance is jaw-dropping.

Far-right organisations are springing-up across the city, competing with each other for pole position as the most racist, the most patriotic. They plan to protest outside the Plymouth Courts at a hearing of Black men of a sexual attack. Yet all six cases of serious rape and abuse of women heard in Plymouth last year had no such protests outside in the cause of keeping women and children safe – all six were white men – no protests to keep us safe from them, was there?

Women’s safety must not be a tool for racism. Women and children are at risk from low wages, insecure housing, inadequate access to support and benefits as well as sexual abuse. Women are at risk from the sexism and misogyny in our general culture. Women’s sexist oppression and abuse cannot be defeated through the racist oppression and abuse of Black men. We must counter these racist demonstrations and honestly campaign for women’s liberation. 

Time to mark International Women’s Day!

Friday 8th March is International Women’s Day. Trade unions have celebrated and commemorated the event every year for generations and will do so again this year. That should hardly be surprising given that women constitute the majority of trade union members, highly represented across the public sector in particular. 

International Women’s Day has absolutely nothing to do with cooking, cosmetics and clothing that some events will focus upon, sponsored by Capitalists large and small, and seeing women as consumers not citizens. Such events actively promote the role-segregation and denigration of of women inside this sexist society.

The Day’s authentic celebrations will focus upon the struggles of working class women, starting with the Bryant & May “Matchgirls Strike” of 1888, when teenage young women, today considered children, formed a union for Health & Safety at work, much derided by employers then and now, and much needed still today. It was also a struggle against women’s oppression, for social justice, building the fight for equal rights at work and at home. A woman’s right to vote, to have full representation in society, to have control over their bodies, their finances and for the right to work.

One-hundred-and-thirty-five years later the struggle for women’s liberation continues, here in the UK and across the world. Internationally, the rape and killing of women is accentuated by war and social conflict.

At home, the Age of Austerity, officially blamed upon COVID, war and climate change rather than record Corporate and Banking profits, has produced mass domestic poverty, women suffering the brunt.

Whilst women constitute the majority of trade union members in the UK, trade unions have a chequered history of fighting for women’s rights. The false divide between men and women in the workplace is exploited by employers, portraying women as a threat to jobs, weak and unreliable – ideas not always challenged. There have been bosses campaigns to identify women as a threat to men’s jobs, unchallenged by unions until women themselves organised against prejudice and discrimination, having to educate male trade unionists as well as employers.

The Great Miners Strike of 1984-5, which began 40 years ago this week, was maintained for an entire year only through the determination of the women in miners communities and beyond, active and leading on picket lines and in support groups, and changing the “male culture” of the union in the process.

Yet today, despite a series of major employment laws for equal pay, won by strike action such as the famous women’s strikes at Ford Dagenham, women workers still earn less than 82% of the man’s wage undertaking work of equal value. 

For part-time workers (of whom many are women) the gap rises to around 30 percent. Over her lifetime a woman will earn on average half of what a man will earn, primarily because of the role women still play as primary carers for children – not to mention all the other family members women will often find themselves responsible for, simply because of oppressive social norms. 

Domestic labour is an asset for the employing class, women reproducing and looking after the workforce free of charge. Women’s oppression is essential to ensure high profits, minimising the costs of social provision of welfare, nurseries and care of the elderly.

Little wonder we see the continued media promotion of the backlash against Feminism, orchestrated by the far-Right from the 1990’s onwards, which has seen a rise in workplace sexism and discrimination, including sexual abuse. Much of the gains won from the 1970’s have been eroded. There is a deepening culture of violence against women and girls, institutionally and socially.

More than 80% of all domestic abuse is from men against women in the UK, with one-in-four women experiencing an abusive relationship for an average period of 6 years of their lives (compared with 1 in 18 of men) – that’s over 6 million women experiencing abuse right now, precisely the same statistic as recorded in the early 1970’s. No change. 

Worse still, 68,000 rapes were recorded by Police in 2022-3, half of which are carried out by the woman’s partner or ex-partner and six out of seven rapes perpetrated by someone she knows, with charges brought in just 2.4% of cases, and far fewer convicted. Little wonder that 5 in 6 women who are raped don’t report it, out of lack of faith in the police and legal system. The succession of cases of sexual abuse by police officers, politicians and sportsmen deliver appalling role models.

9 out of ten girls and young women say they’ve experienced sexist name-calling at school, the era of smartphones resulting in “dick pics” and other sexual images being received, unwanted and unsolicited, and causing a common sense of threat, fear and subjugation. 

The backlash against women’s rights is being ramped-up. The misogynist Andrew Tate’s vile internet broadcasts stating that “women are men’s property” is watched by hundreds of millions, influencing the current young generation, his bile being just the tip of a deep iceberg of political male-supremacy rising-up alongside white-supremacy and racism.

Working class men are stupid idiots to denigrate women – our partners, sisters and daughters, friends and workmates. Indeed, the sense of “protection” evoked by male-dominated culture that arouses men to action when their family members are abused, is hypocritically forgotten when putting down women in the workplace with sexist remarks, shielded as “banter”, and the objectification of women’s bodies, dehumanising women and exerting power over women as a source of domination and self-aggrandisement.

In Plymouth we have experienced, all too horrifically, the results of the campaign for male-supremacy, a gunman who expressed misogynistic and homophobic views shooting his mother and four passers-by, shown to have been part of the “intel” movement promoting male domination and the hatred of women.

The International Women’s Day events this Friday should not simply be a celebration, and certainly not any vehicle for reproducing the sexist imagery and Capitalist cultural domination of women as things and products. We need a huge campaign of education and challenge against women’s subjugation and for true women’s liberation.

The sexual division in the working class should not be underestimated as a the obstacle in achieving the class unity that can win decent pay and conditions for everyone. 

It took militancy and collective action to make the gains now at risk if not lost. Any decent working class men – and we exist in our millions – should restate the pledge this week to challenge all aspects of sexism and women’s subjugation, and join with women if they’re fight against oppression. 

Trade Unionists will stand in solidarity with Plymouth’s Women’s Liberation event 12-2pm on Friday at the Sundial, Armada Way.