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Jill Ovens resigned from New Zealandโ€™s Labour Party to start the Womenโ€™s Rights Party

After womenโ€™s rights campaigner Kellie-Jay Keen was mobbed and assaulted in New Zealand, longtime feminist and socialist Jill Ovens decided sheโ€™d had enough. The following week, Jill resigned from the Labour Party and founded the Womenโ€™s Rights Party, which states, on their website:

โ€œWe want a world that is safe and fair for women and girls

The Womenโ€™s Rights Party is a party of women and men who believe in democracy, equality, and biological reality.

Sex is binary

Human beings cannot change sex

Women are adult humans of the female sexโ€

Jill had been an active member of the Labour Party but had become increasingly angered as womenโ€™s voices were not being listened to. Since retiring from the union movement, she has thrown her energy into the Womenโ€™s Rights Party, which has set out to recruit 500 members so they can register as a political party and be on the ballot in the New Zealand General Election in October.

The Womenโ€™s Rights Party aims to give women an option on the ballot paper who
find themselves politically homeless as mainstream parties have stopped listening to women and their concerns. In addition to contesting Parliamentary and local body elections, they hope to influence cross party policies to promote and uphold the rights and status of women and girls.

In this episode, I speak with Jill about her political history and why she formed the Womenโ€™s Rights Party.ย 

The post Jill Ovens resigned from New Zealandโ€™s Labour Party to start the Womenโ€™s Rights Party appeared first on Feminist Current.

Students in Wales to get ยฃ1,000 maintenance boost amid cost of living crisis

Labour says inflation may force more students to drop out, as those in England get just ยฃ200 more on average

Students from Wales will get ยฃ1,000 more to help with the cost of living crisis while those in England get just ยฃ200 on average, as Labour MPs said inflation may force more students to drop out of university.

The Welsh government said maintenance loans and grants for its students would rise by 9.4% from September, with support for full-time students increasing from ยฃ10,710 to ยฃ11,720 on average. Students in England will get a rise of just 2.8% in the next academic year after the Westminster governmentโ€™s announcement last week, with the average maintenance loan increasing by about ยฃ200.

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