on 01-10-2013 08:01 AM
1. On how she chose to conduct herself immediately after losing the Prime Ministership:
Gillard thought it best to “give a gift of silence to the Labor party throughout the course of the campaign; to do absolutely nothing”.
2. On the key difference between herself and Kevin Rudd:
“I think the key difference is every day I was deputy prime minister I spent all of my time doing everything I could to have the Labor government prosper.”
3. On seeing sexist and offensive cartoons and statements about herself on social media:
She felt not sadness or hurt but, ”more like murderous rage really”.
“For my personal liberty, it’s probably a good thing that I didn’t focus on them… At the end of the day, yes, it happened to me, but it’s not, you know, about me. It’s about all of us, about women and about the kind of society we want to be for all of us.”
4. On playing the so-called ‘gender card’:
“It just amazes me that we can be having this infantile conversation about gender wars, and … you just feel like saying: ‘Well, if it was your daughter and she was putting up with sexist abuse at work, what would you advise her to do?’” Gillard said.
“Because apparently if she complains, she is playing the victim, and playing gender wars, and if she doesn’t complain, then she really is a victim.”
5. On what an average day was like in her job as Prime Minister:
Gillard would go through the papers in the morning, remaking most days to her Deputy Prime Minister Wayne Swan: “Polls are **bleep**. Papers are **bleep**. Yep, yes they are, Wayne.”
6. On what advice she would give to new Prime Minister Tony Abbott:
“It is a big step from criticising what you think is wrong to working out and implementing what you think is right. On current indications, Prime Minister Abbott is intending to take that step slowly. And for all of us, I think that might well be a good thing.”
7. On whether she would like to see Hillary Clinton run for the American Presidency in 2016:
“Wouldn’t it be fantastic to follow the first African American president, with the first woman president?”
8. On what advice she would give Tony Abbott now that’s he’s brought the women’s portfolio within his own Government department.
“Ask Tanya [Plibersek].”
9. On how she managed to stay motivated in the face of “horrible sexism”:
Gillard first responded to the question, asked by an 11-year-old girl, cautioning: ”I now need to answer [the question] not using words that are inappropriate… How old are you again?”
She continued, “In moments of some, you know, stress and pressure, for example, when I was getting myself together to go out and give my final speech as Prime Minister, I certainly did say to myself that I wouldn’t give those people the satisfaction of seeing me shed a tear – I wouldn’t do that.”
10. On whether she would encourage women to think about pursuing politics:
If she could go back and advise another woman in her own position – about to be the nation’s first female PM – Gillard said she “…would still say to her: do it. Because the benefits of what you get to do are far superior to the burdens”
11. On what it will be like for Australia’s next female Prime Minister:
“I think even people who may not remember me as a good PM, I think for whoever the next woman is, there will be a bit of a pause, breathe, whatever else this female Prime Minister does, we don’t want it to be like that for her again.”
on 01-10-2013 04:15 PM
@newstart2380 wrote:
Haha, she spent her time working out how she could stab KRudd in the back and take his job, what a baloney answer. She is a she devil.
what are you prey tell ?
on 01-10-2013 04:16 PM
Newstart wrote: She is a she devil.
on 01-10-2013 04:16 PM
or should that be Pray tell ?
on 01-10-2013 04:18 PM
Pray.
More than a whiff, she -ele
on 01-10-2013 04:20 PM
In that case prey, Iza. They are still picking the bones.
on 01-10-2013 04:22 PM
Urban dictionary:
She Devil - a temptress who has an amazing influence on men.
on 01-10-2013 04:24 PM
MM Wrote:Therein lies the heart of this topic, those here who identify with what they perceive, and in many cases rightly so, as to past insults/events in their lives, whether childhood or as adults (resonance) because of their gender.
and why do some need to be the givers of insults ?
same reason ?
and for both genders do you think ?
because of gender ?
on 01-10-2013 04:35 PM
omg
Murderous Rage!
I wonder how Mr Rudd felt after the ALP stabbed him in the back and put Ms Gillard in his place!
Murderous Rage!
I wonder how Ms Gillard felt after she was deposed as PM after her own party dethroned her and PUT MR RUDD BACK IN THE SAME POSITION they set her up to topple him from in the first place.
Murderous Rage?
Oh take it out on the incoming government after the voting public decided it'd had enough of ALP's antics!
on 01-10-2013 05:02 PM
give her a break Icy,it's not like she is making an issue about where people eat their lunch at work...it's much much bigger than that lol
on 01-10-2013 05:09 PM
OMG here we go again with the left & Labor fantasizing again about the real truth about Gillard. Eulogizing & hero worshipping their failed leaders they are so fond of doing.
She set out to play the gender card at the urging of McTernan, he did it in the UK & thought it would work out here. She sought to exploit her gender, exploit being a victim even when she gave as good as she got. It was all she had left.
She was a willing participant in the whole gender victimhood ploy & the Emily listers & the old trout sisterhood who have never moved on from the 60's woman's lib who eagerly assisted her. Her sisters abandoned her to save their own necks. They ran from her as far away as they could get.
She was rejected by her own party & rejected by the voters because under her Labor would have lost up to 15 more seats.
So please stop it, stop the sympathy card & the crocodile tears for a woman who knew exactly what she wanted, what she was doing & where it led her. She would still be in parliament now if it was up to her, she wanted it & wanted it desperately & would have never given it up, ever, her party dumped her in the knowledge she would have to leave politics forever.
So lets be frank here, her beloved Labor party got rid of her because she was an abject failure as a leader, nothing to do with her gender.
One thing she has done is put back women ever getting to the top of politics for generations. That's her legacy.