Northern Ireland's Female Cad
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We've spent a lot of time at DoubleX in the past few months contemplating the way men seem to be more likely than women to trash their lives and careers at the urgings of their nether regions (or, in the case of Mark Sanford, "love"). We racked our collective brains trying to come up with a woman to add to our list of Top Cads of 2009 and failed. Now Northern Ireland MP Iris Robinson—mother of three grown children and wife of the country's First Minister Peter Robinson—goes to the top of the list for 2010 scandals thus far—she resigned late last month, but it's only in the first days of 2010 that the details of her affair with a 19-year-old and her misuse of her position to help her lover fund and open a business have come out. We don't have many women-centered political sex scandals to compare her with, but when it comes to "taking it like a man," she's already shown that female politicians—or at least this particular, not otherwise overly sympathetic Irish female politician, do things differently.
Instead of waiting for the news of her financial and family troubles to break, Mrs. Robinson (known in Northern Ireland for her anti-gay stance—she described homosexuality as only slightly less "vile" than "sexually abusing innocent children") resigned in late December, and apparently attempted suicide. She didn't take the stage for the inevitable press conference, stoic husband by her side, to apologize to the nation and her family and attempt to weather the storm. Instead, she's issued an apologetic statement, but left the appearances to her husband, whose political career is also in danger because of allegations that he knew about and didn't reveal her financial transgressions. So far, he's supporting his wife and defending his marriage, but this one—a new kind of a problem for a relatively new style of political partnership—has yet to play out.
Granted, Iris Robinson is a sample of one, but it's notable that so many male politicians, faced with far more dramatic scandals or at least equally embarrassing ones, tied on their striped ties and let the media and the public take a swing at them—even while, in some cases, offering mental stresses, depression, and other excuses for their behavior. It's not necessarily more admirable, but it's certainly a different way to handle the fallout from stepping into this particular pitfall of power. Meanwhile, Mrs. Robinson, so far, stays home. Is she retiring from the spotlight to give her husband a better chance at keeping his position? Does she feel more personal guilt over her behavior—or does she believe that any form of brazening this out would only make things worse for them both? Northern Ireland's press will surely be all over this, but a little meta-scrutiny is appropriate from this side of the pond.

Comments
Gender equality
By: tommyboy_2610 | Mon, 01/11/2010 - 00:35
This is Not Your Father’s Scandal
A 58-year old politician – married, of course – takes a 19 year old lover who gets over $80,000, “donated” by the politician’s wealthy supporters to start a business. Word gets out. Scandal follows, of course.
The difference here is that the politician is a woman. Even within the confines of corrupt bourgeois politics this has to be considered a victory for gender equality! And, she is not only a member of the Northern Irish National Assembly and of the British House of Commons, representing her home district of Belfast. And, she is not only married to the First Minister of the Northern Ireland Executive – prime minister, in effect. But, shades of The Graduate, she is MRS. ROBINSON!
Really. We’re talking about Iris Robinson, wife of Peter. Adding to the irony is the fact that in Northern Ireland religion is a powerful social and political symbol. The Robinsons are leaders of a party representing a section of the statelet’s Protestant majority known in equal parts for its opposition to equality for Catholics and support to “conservative, family values.”
“And here’s to you, Mrs. Robinson,
Jesus loves you more than you can know…”
More of the same at: http://thisoldanvil.livejournal.com/
Northern Ireland: A tough place for descriptive nouns
By: KJ Dell Antonia | Fri, 01/08/2010 - 23:34
I did recognize that Northern Ireland isn't entirely sovereign, and I won't pretend to understand the precise workings of its government, but I understood that it has a "First Minister" and GB a "Prime Minister" for exactly that reason--in my head, as I debated explaining what a First Minister was. But I do think of it as a "country" (which isn't really a term with a absolutely defined political identity), and I'm not alone. Wikipedia, for example, describes Northern Ireland as "one of the four countries of the United Kingdom." I can see, too, why there might be a better nomenclature. But from a purely stylistic point of view, the NYT has called it a country in its reporting, so I'm going to go with it. That is, if it comes up again.
Minor point
By: bjan_1 | Fri, 01/08/2010 - 14:38
Northern Ireland is not a country. It's a region of the United Kingdom with its own devolved government, that has limited control over domestic affairs, similar to that of the Scottish government.