Queensland women aspiring to run in next year's local and state elections are being encouraged to take the opportunity to upskill through the QUT Pathways to Politics for Women program, with applications for the 2023 program closing on 1 May.
The non-partisan program helps women to identify and improve the skills needed to stand for election, and is supported by elected women from all parties and at all levels of government.
Program director Professor Vicky Browning said the course helped participants build strong networks both within the cohort and with senior party leaders and boosted confidence.
"I think the course really builds their knowledge of politics and their campaigning, but it also has a huge impact on their beliefs about themselves," Professor Browning said.
"They come in second-guessing themselves, but by the time they leave they have a much stronger belief in their capability."
While Pathways alum Natalie Marr has served a term on Townsville City Council and contested the 2020 state election, she said the course had made her well prepared to run again in 2024, as the LNP candidate for Thuringowa.
"During the course I kept thinking to myself, 'I wish I'd done this before I ran in an election'", she said.
"It has given me the confidence of how I can do things better, and it really would have prepared me for the election, especially as a woman."
"I understand my community, and know I'm a hard worker, but after doing the course I am much more confident about communicating my own personal story and how it would be appreciated by voters and would make me a great local MP," she said.
Ms Marr encouraged women from the regions to apply for the program.
"It is a great opportunity to be surrounded and supported by an incredibly diverse group of positive women," she said.
"There's nothing like this in the regions. The fact that QUT, their sponsors and supporters make it available to rural and regional Queenslanders makes it really important. Often when women get into seats in the regions they don't have the support of other women – they're quite isolated – but this program gives you a great network."
Cairns City Councillor Amy Eden says the Pathways program has made her seriously consider running for Mayor in the 2024 local government elections.
"We need more women in local government, and in all levels of government. Men and women think differently, have different lenses and it's important to have that diversity and representation in our leadership," she said.
"I'd like to see a more demographically balanced council, one reflective of our community – it's about balance."
"Since completing the program, I have a greater appreciation of the importance of 'you can't be what you can't see' – and we need to lead by example of your women leaders of tomorrow.
Ms Eden said experiencing the generous support of elected politicians for the Pathways program had helped her to connect with mentors and experts to equip her for a tilt at Mayor in 2024.
"This course has helped me have the confidence to reach out to the people who can support me and to learn from their ideas for cities. I've gone outside of Cairns because of this course and people are so happy to give time to support the greater good," Ms Eden said.
The program sponsors regional and rural women's travel accommodation to attend the program in Brisbane, which includes three two-day workshops over three months, as well as four virtual classrooms, access to an online learning platform, networking functions and coaching sessions.
Queensland women and non-binary people have one more week to apply for the QUT Pathways program – applications close at midnight 1 May 2023.
The Queensland program is part of a national network of independent programs based at Australian universities modelled on the Pathways to Politics Program for Women, which was launched by the University of Melbourne in 2016 in partnership with the Women's Leadership Institute Australia, and the Trawalla Foundation. The network has launched a Pathways to Politics for Women Knowledge Hub.
The foundation University of Melbourne program was developed in consultation with the Women and Public Policy Program at the Harvard Kennedy School with reference to their long-running "From Harvard Square to the Oval Office" practicum, to redress the underrepresentation of women in Australian politics.
Picture top: Natalie Marr (left) and Amy Eden.