Monthly Archives: February 2014

Andrew Duff, Rapporteur, welcomes Czech decision to withdraw treaty change proposal on Charter of Fundamental Rights

The Czech Government today announced its decision to withdraw their proposal to join the British Protocol on the Charter of Fundamental Rights. The move was welcomed by Andrew Duff MEP (ALDE/UK), the Parliament’s long-standing rapporteur …

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EU must stand by the Ukrainian people

Guy Verhofstadt, ALDE leader, welcomes that the High Representative is calling the EU Foreign Ministers together on Ukraine on Thursday this week.

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EU’s response to Ukraine so far inadequate

Reacting to news of escalating violence in Ukraine, Guy Verhofstadt, ALDE leader called on the High Representative of the EU to take urgent action.

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Business say: EU boosts UK trade

The campaign to protect jobs in the region, led by two Liberal Democrat MEPs, Edward McMillan-Scott and Rebecca Taylor, is gaining ground as two major employers in our region, BAE and Tata Steel, made the case for the UK’s continued …

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NSA scandal shows need for strengthening Parliament’s powers of inquiry

NSA scandal shows need for strengthening Parliament’s powers of inquiry
Today the European Parliament’s Civil Liberties Committee voted on its final report following six months of inquiry into the massive surveillance of EU citizens by the US National Security Agency and by Member States secret services.

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Judges for Europe’s top court should be decided on merit

The Legal Affairs Committee of the European Parliament has approved today an increase of a further nine judges to the European Court of Justice because of the steadily increasing number of cases brought to the Court. The Council however, …

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Egypt should act to stop human trafficking and torturing in Sinai

Egypt should act to stop human trafficking and torturing in Sinai
Today Human Rights Watch published a 79 page long report “‘I Wanted to Lie Down and Die:’ Trafficking and Torture of Eritreans in Sudan and Egypt,”. The report documents how, since 2010, Egyptian traffickers have tortured Eritreans for ransom in the Sinai Peninsula, including through rape, burning, and mutilation. It also documents torture by traffickers in eastern Sudan and 29 incidents in which victims told Human Rights Watch that Sudanese and Egyptian security officers facilitated trafficker abuses rather than arresting them and rescuing their victims.

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Swiss vote – EU must address consequences

Yesterday by the narrowest of margins (50.3%), the Swiss people backed a referendum proposed by the Swiss People’s party asking to cap the number of migrants, including from EU countries.

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Outdated, outmoded and increasingly inaccurate: is it time follow our European neighbours and say goodbye to "Miss"?

It has long been unfair that women can be identified by their marital status through the use of  “Miss” or “Mrs” whereas men cannot via “Mr”. “Ms” was introduced as an alternative for both married and unmarried women, although is not universally used or liked.

Many journalists struggle when a married woman doesn’t take her husband’s surname, as seen in numerous articles referring to Nick Clegg’s wife Miriam González Durántez as “Mrs Clegg” despite that not being her name. Wikipedia even says “Miriam Clegg, known professionally by…..” !!?? Why is it so complicated to understand that Miriam was given a surname at birth (actually two as per Spanish custom) that she will use for her whole life? That’s what men do….

I have also noticed newspapers calling married women who have kept their own name “Miss”. When the tabloids revealed then Labour Home Secretary Jacqui Smith’s husband’s expense claims, many rather oddly referred to a woman they knew was married, as “Miss Smith” !!?? It’s as if they think a woman who keeps her own name isn’t properly married or something (dinosaur alert!).

Anyone would think that not taking your husband’s surname on marriage was something new, unusual and shocking. It isn’t new at all, although it was when my Mum did it some forty (!) years ago in 1972. Like other women of her generation, my Mum kept her name because she didn’t like the historical significance of taking your husband’s surname, namely that you became his property.

It is not unusual for women to keep their own name these days; currently 50% of married women do, while 50% opt to take their husband’s name. There is also a trend, albeit somewhat middle class, for women to add their husband’s name to their own and sometimes give that double barrelled name to their kids too.

The fact that people marry later and the vast majority of women work, surely has an impact; changing surname in your 30s involves not only bureaucracy (replacing driving licence, passport, credit cards etc), but also several years of explaining your name change in a professional context. I have seen linkedin profiles along the lines of “Jane Smith (nee Brown)” that stay like that for years.

There is then the associated bureaucracy of changing your name back to your “maiden” name, should you be unfortunate enough to get divorced and not want to keep your ex-husband’s name. I also know a handful of women who still have the name of their first husband although they have since divorced and re-married. Divorce also raises another question: should a divorced woman stop being called Mrs and revert to Miss even if she still has her husband’s name or only if she changes her name back?

A friend who did not change her name when she married was very annoyed to receive a cheque payable to a person who doesn’t exist (my friend’s first name with her husband’s surname). She had to take her marriage certificate to the bank (!) to pay it in as obviously neither her bank account nor any ID she possesses, is in the name of her husband.

So what do other European countries do? Well in Belgium, where I used to live, an adult woman is officially “Madame” (in French) or “Mevrouw” (in Dutch) and almost always in conversation too; I recall being called “Mademoiselle” only very occasionally when in my early 20s. In Germany “Frau” is now used for all adult women, the German version of Miss (“Fraulein”) seemingly consigned to history or used only for little girls.

In the European Parliament, I am referred to as Madame/Frau/Mevrouw etc and this is even extended to English, where “Mrs” is used in written and spoken communications. At first I found being called Mrs when I am not married, a bit odd, but I soon got used to it.

Another aspect of using “Miss” is that it applies to cohabiting women with children who have not married their partners, which seems rather inaccurate i.e. it no longer necessarily identifies a single (childless?) woman. A friend who is the deputy head of a primary school is in theory still “Miss”, despite living with her partner for more than 15 years and having two children.

A cohabiting friend with children wondered (in the days when marital status was commonly on CVs) whether putting “single” was misleading. That particular problem is now solved by the fact that marital status is no longer included on a CV. In Belgium civil status (“état civil” in French) was removed from ID cards some 10 years ago, which greatly pleased a divorced friend who hated the fact that her ID card said “divorced” rather than reverting to “single”.

So I wonder if it is time to get rid of “Miss” given that as well as being outdated and outmoded, its use is increasingly inaccurate? The obvious route would be to follow what Belgium does, so all adult women would become “Mrs”. However, I wonder if some married women, who rather like using Mrs to show that they are married, might object to this? Comments welcome!

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Outdated, outmoded and increasingly inaccurate: is it time follow our European neighbours and say goodbye to "Miss"?

It has long been unfair that women can be identified by their marital status through the use of  “Miss” or “Mrs” whereas men cannot via “Mr”. “Ms” was introduced as an alternative for both married and unmarried women, although is not universally used or liked.

more …

Posted in Blog | Comments Off on Outdated, outmoded and increasingly inaccurate: is it time follow our European neighbours and say goodbye to "Miss"?