Deccan Chronicle

Pink booths, teddy bears

- MEENA KANDASWAMI

In the recently held assembly elections in Punjab and Goa, only seven per cent of the candidates were women, but this dismal representa­tion was washed out in the excitement about a large turn-out and the hullabaloo around the introducti­on of women-only pink polling booths.

When election commission officials in Goa shamelessl­y drawl about their “initiative” of giving pink teddy bears to early first-time women voters, and reel out statistics of how these all-women voting booths decorated with pink balloons polled two per cent more votes, we must realise that such token gestures are not empowering to women in any manner. Because they infantilis­e women, making it appear as if their motivation to vote is linked to a snugly soft toy.

Bribery is not new in electoral politics, but we now seem to be on a downward spiral where the State itself bribes us into democracy and citizenshi­p, one tiny pink teddy bear at a time.

When questioned about the lack of a substantia­l number of female candidates, political parties take refuge in discussing viability and “winnabilit­y”.

Women are blamed for their absence at the grassroots level, for shying away from contesting elections, for not having sufficient money and muscle power.

In reality, women’s political participat­ion is thwarted for the same reason that they are unable to enter the workforce, access the public sphere, travel alone or marry across caste and religious lines: misogyny, patriarcha­l violence and the lack of a safe environmen­t.

This is why the women politician­s we see are the ones who have been installed into leadership from the top — by virtue of being someone’s daughter, sister, wife, daughter-in-law, girlfriend, and so on. The outsider either has to merge into the political families, or she has to face a disgracefu­l exit having become a victim of character assassinat­ion. A reservatio­n bill for women is no quick-fix either. We have seen the prevalence of dummy women candidates in panchayats turn the system into a total farce, the man ruling by proxy. A state like Punjab-with a skewed sex ratio and feudal codes is a tough battlegrou­nd for a young woman who want change.

Less than a month ago, over three million women took part in the Women's March to protest Donald Trump’s election as President of the United States, and these public rallies spread to over 670 cities. In what is clearly not an isolated trend, what we are witnessing globally is the politicisa­tion of young women, who having been relegated to the margins, are seeking to wrest control of their destinies instead of having the old boys club make decisions on their behalf.

The sight of these millions of women protesters induces hope. The day is not far off when women in India — especially dalit, adivasi women who bear the brunt of casteist, feudal, capitalist exploitati­on and State terror — will be taking to the streets en masse to agitate and demand their rights.

Such a process of mass resistance will inevitably ensure that every town puts forward a firebrand leader. On that day, we need not have columns such as this one, pondering why there are not enough female politician­s. Instead, as writers, we can chronicle their incredible journeys to the pinnacles of power. Meena Kandaswami is an author, poet and feminist activist whose work focuses on caste annihilati­on among other issues.

A reservatio­n bill for women is no fix either. We have seen the prevalence of dummy women candidates in panchayats turn the system into a total farce, the man ruling by proxy

 ??  ?? The teddy bears that were being handed out to women voters in Goa — Image via Atish Naik
The teddy bears that were being handed out to women voters in Goa — Image via Atish Naik
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