G2K condemns PNP Nekeisha Burchell’s sexist remarks directed at Speaker of the House


Warns against discouraging young women from public life
Generation 2000 (G2K), the young professional affiliate of the Jamaica Labour Party, strongly condemns the recent comments attributed to Member of Parliament Nekeisha Burchell, in which she reportedly likened the Speaker of the House, the Honourable Juliet Holness, to women who like to control their husbands saying, “I just think the Speaker, she likes to be in control, and I mean, that kind of control that perhaps you can get away with in a marriage, if you want to control your husband…”
G2K regards the statement as sexist, unfortunate, and beneath the standard expected of elected representatives. Political disagreement is legitimate, and robust debate is essential to democracy. However, attacking a woman in leadership through domestic stereotypes is unacceptable.
The Speaker of the House occupies one of the most important offices in Jamaica’s parliamentary democracy. The role requires the enforcement of Standing Orders, the maintenance of order, and the protection of the dignity of Parliament. Criticism of the Speaker’s rulings should therefore be grounded in procedure, law, and fact, not gendered insults.

These comments are especially troubling at a time when women remain underrepresented in political leadership. Women hold just 30.2% of seats in Jamaica’s House of Representatives and only 27.5% globally, figures that highlight how far parity remains.
G2K President Sashana-Lee Edwards said women in public life already face constant scrutiny and barriers to having their authority respected on its own merits.
“For MP Burchell to liken Speaker Holness enforcing the rules of Parliament to a controlling wife is deeply inappropriate and reinforces outdated stereotypes about women in leadership. A male Speaker displaying the same firmness would likely be described as decisive or strong. That double standard is exactly what we should be dismantling, not reinforcing,” Edwards said.

G2K noted that sexist commentary contributes to a hostile political environment that discourages women, particularly young women, from entering public life. Women in politics already face disproportionate levels of abuse, harassment, and intimidation globally.
Jamaica’s Parliament must remain a place where women can lead, preside, and serve without being reduced to outdated stereotypes. Disagreement is expected in democracy. Sexism is not.
G2K therefore calls on MP Burchell to withdraw the statement and apologise to the Speaker, to women in public life, and to the Jamaican people.
Syndicated from Our Today · originally published .
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