The following is an article comparing the politics and attitudes in Italy and Spain after the recent general elections in both countries. Read the full article by clicking on the main title ("Too pink or too macho?") to this post.
There has been a lot of talk about gender equality in the run-up to Italy's recent general election, but as is all to clear from the line-up of TV magnate Silvio Berlusconi's new cabinet, men still rule here.
Out of 21 ministers in the new right-wing administration there are only four women, all given lightweight roles.
Most of them have so far won distinction more for their looks rather than for their political prowess.
The glamorous new Minister for Equal Opportunities, 32-year-old Mara Carfagna, is a former showgirl from one of Mr Berlusconi's television networks.
She also came sixth in the 1997 Miss Italy contest.
"You are simply gorgeous," an admirer posted on the new minister's website on her first day in office.
An MP since 2006, she lists her main hobby as "collecting pens" according to one of her profiles.
Environment Minister Stefania Prestagiacomo, 41, is a lawyer and a former co-ordinator of Mr Berlusconi's Forza Italia party in Lombardy.
Fresh faces
Her good looks won for her the title of "Miss Parliament" when she was first elected as MP for Syracuse, in Sicily, 14 years ago.
A popular comedian once described her as: "the best thing in Italian politics".
Mr Berlusconi, now 71, who has described Spain's new government as "too pink" prides himself on being a ladies' man.
He cultivates a playboy image and makes off-colour jokes about his fondness for glamorous women, sometimes earning him public reprimands from his estranged second wife.
He once said that, if he were single, he would marry Ms Carfagna.
Another woman chosen for a cabinet post by Mr Berlusconi is Giorgia Meloni, the new youth minister. At 31, she is one of the youngest people ever to reach ministerial rank in Italy.
The 'grey quota'
She comes from a traditionally leftist Roman suburb where she worked successfully as a youth organiser for the post-fascist National Alliance party.
Maria Stella Gelmini, 34, also a lawyer, from Lombardy, is the new minister of education.
"I don't believe in the 'pink quota', rather the 'grey quota'," she is quoted as saying.
"Now we shall have the opportunity to find out how much 'grey matter' she has," was the somewhat tart comment of the left-wing daily La Repubblica.
Alessandra Mussolini, the granddaughter of the former fascist dictator Benito Mussolini, who went into right-wing politics in the early 1990s after an earlier career as a model and minor actress, setting up a small right splinter party of her own, has been left out in the cold by Mr Berlusconi.
"I don't really think there is a future for me with the new government," she petulantly remarked.
Italian women tend to be discriminated against in the workplace despite some timid recent gender equality legislation.
Employment of women in the cultural labour market is gradually improving, according to the latest Italian government statistics, but Italian women still tend to get lesser-paid jobs - as librarians, archaeologists or historians, for example.
With female employment in Italy almost at the bottom of the EU ladder - at 46% - Ms Carfagna is going to have her work cut out* to try to change prevailing Italian macho mentalities.
Source: BBC News
Vocabulary Focus
:
* if you have your work cut out to do something, then you face a challenging job.
- You will have your work cut out to convince him of your ideas.
- I had my work cut out to get the class ready for the exams.
4 comments:
Hi Graham, I have read it.
Hi Ariane,
You will notice at the end of some articles there is a section - "Vocabulary Focus".
Write down in your notebooks any other unfamiliar vocabulary from the articles.
Create some example sentences as I have done, either here or in your notebooks, and I will happily correct them.
All this is time permitting, needless to say.
And of course, try to use them when possible.
Hello Graham, I read the article.
OK; good to know, Maty!
It's a wonder so many Italian women voted for Berlusconi in the recent elections, given his comments about them.
Have you read the continuation of the article comparing Spanish politics at present? Remember to click on the main title to see the original article.
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