The split in the grassroots women鈥檚 liberation movement was on display when two rallies to mark International Women鈥檚 Day (IWD) were held on March 9. Each attracted around 100 people.
The first was held at Emma Miller Place, the site of last year鈥檚 rally. It was organised by the collective that had organised the 2018 rally and was reported by 麻豆传媒 Weekly here. It attracted 300 people despite rainy weather and controversially featured transphobic statements and signs and a performer known for her public hostility towards trans women. A sizeable number of participants left in protest.
The Facebook event page made it clear that the same politics of hostility to trans women's participation in the women's liberation movement would be informing this rally. At the march itself, sashes made as fundraisers for the organisers featured slogans such as 鈥渨oman: adult female鈥 and 鈥渄efend female spaces鈥. These slogans were amplified by the first MC's speech, which decried trans women鈥檚 inclusion in women's sport, prisons, domestic violence services and lesbian spaces.
The speakers spoke passionately about femicide, the links between violence against women, poverty, homelessness and imprisonment, and the flaws in the law that allow domestic violence to continue after relationships end. But none spoke for the inclusion of trans women, or contradicted the MC鈥檚 claim that feminists (by implication, feminists like their organising committee) are 鈥渢he staunchest defenders of transgendered people鈥檚 rights鈥.
The MC alluded to the smaller turnout, acknowledging that fewer organisations had supported the committee this year. It was explained away as a casualty of neoliberalism; left unexplained was what had changed about neoliberalism in a year.
More plausible is that people were either taking sides on the question of transphobia, or staying away in confusion or demoralisation. Some, who had spoken up for trans women鈥檚 inclusion the previous year, had been urged not to attend this year 鈥渟ince you don鈥檛 support women鈥檚 liberation鈥.
The later rally was held at Queens Gardens and had been organised in response to the whorephobia and transphobia of the previous year鈥檚 IWD rally. Feminist Action sought to reconnect with the radical history of the day, hosting it as International Working Women's Day to highlight its socialist origin.
The exuberant, predominantly young crowd responded enthusiastically to the MC鈥檚 declaration of inclusion and welcome to working women, sex workers, women of colour, women with disability, trans women and nonbinary people.
The rally hailed the current struggle of Yaggera Ugarapal people to stop development of the Deebing Creek mission site. Speakers welcomed the decriminalisation of abortion in Queensland and federal Labor鈥檚 commitment to ensure hospital access to the service; called for decriminalisation of sex work; and spoke of the impact of transphobia on trans women. Jane Walker, the mother of Nara Walker, imprisoned in Iceland after biting her abusive husband鈥檚 tongue, spoke of Nara鈥檚 experience of domestic violence and appealed for support for the campaign to bring Nara home.
In the streets, rally goers chanted: 鈥淲omen united will never be defeated鈥; 鈥淏ring Nara home鈥; 鈥淪ex work is work鈥; 鈥淭rans women are women鈥; 鈥淢y body, my life, my right to decide鈥; and 鈥淪ay it once, say it again 鈥 no excuse for violent men鈥.
While it is clear that many of the issues raised in the two rallies were held in common, the decision to make IWD 鈥渞adical again鈥 by excluding trans women runs counter to the conclusions being drawn by a new generation of feminists who want to fight capitalist patriarchy by making alliances between all who suffer at its hands, not just cis women.
I have been attending IWD rallies for more than 25 years. I found last year鈥檚 rally and aftermath gut-wrenching, and the Emma Miller Place rally heartbreaking. But afternoon rally, despite heatwave conditions, was completely invigorating.
Video:聽International Women's Day Brisbane 2019 -聽.