It certainly was an interesting meal and one I’d been quietly dreading ever since it was suggested by a mutual colleague, Australian Women’s Weekly editor Helen McCabe who did a fine impersonation of Ban-ki Moon in brokering peace talks between the opposition leader and me.
My biggest fear was this: what if I bloody LIKED him? That would be a complete disaster.
You see, I couldn’t possibly like Tony Abbott because we were fighting. Well, not fighting exactly. More like Tony was busy trying to be an alternative prime minister and keep his feet out of his mouth while I was busy assassinating his character and policies on my website Mamamia.
On the day he was elected opposition leader, I was quick to write a very scathing blog post which declared it a dark day for women, featured the word “Argh???!!!” several times and wondered if the party who elected him were on crack. I wrapped it up by emphasising that I wasn’t anti-Liberal necessarily, just anti-Abbott.
In my spontaneous outrage, I didn’t check all my facts and admittedly, some were incorrect (e.g., that Abbott is opposed to contraception and IVF and that he eats kittens for breakfast). Later, I amended these errors. My bad. But still. Tony Abbott as opposition leader? Really, Libs?
Over the next few hours as the comments from women poured in (most of them equally alarmed), my phone began to ring with journalists wanting commentary on Abbott’s surprise election as Liberal leader from the point of view of Australian women.
No pressure, just speak for an entire gender, will you? I don’t think so.
It was a pattern which would repeat itself every time Abbott said anything about controversial about women, from ironing to virginity. Inadvertently, I’d become the go-to girl for anti-Abbott quotes. So I didn’t give any.
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Irony. Not a fan of Abbott - and not really a fan of KRudd either, but hey, Labor could have done worse during their term and without compelling reasons to consider an alternative I pretty much thought case closed....and then Labor came up with a cunning plan…………internet censorship!
To put this into perspective, this plan would put us in a really small, close-knit group of such progressive regimes as, wait for it - China, Iran and..you guessed it, Australia! So here's the irony, Tony Abbott is the one characterised as the one with an ideological agenda to be feared...and I do have serious issues with him (nothing to do with reproductive rights, so please let’s not go there again), but it’s Rudd who’s pushing a staggeringly dangerous and paternalistic policy – am I the only one who’s afraid?
I found this post really interesting. Your initial reaction to Tony Abbott when he becameleader reflected my own distaste for the man, but somehow, even I am finding him far more likable as leader (not that I'd vote for him). I thought this post really an honest exploration. Thanks