I feel conflicted about enjoying this book knowing that Penny Wong never wanted it written.
But while she may not have wanted this book to come to life, I am very glad that it did.
I’ve always made the joke that somewhere in my ancestry Penny Wong and I must be related, my basis was our surnames. However, upon reading this biography, I realised that Penny Wong’s biography is the first instance of me seeing myself portrayed in media.
Penny Wong comes from a sort of melting pot background, with family from Malaysia originating from the Hakka Chinese people. Penny Wong has lived overseas, lives in Australia, is our foreign minister and was formerly minister for Climate Change & Water. To me, this eclectic upbringing and diverse career path (while in the domain of politics) reflects my own life in a way I have never seen portrayed in films or books before. I was born and raised in Australia, but my family are Hakka Chinese descendants. Most of my family moved to Mauritius but some moved to Malaysia. I grew up bilingual in French and English and had the privilege to study abroad, where I learned Spanish & Portuguese. My interests were varied but included climate change & water, and more recently foreign affairs.
Penny Wong might never have wanted this biography published, but to me, this biography means the world.
Penny Wong represents me.
Margaret Simons did a phenomenal job in writing an engaging biography about Australia’s now foreign minister. This book also gave me a broader understanding of politics and also helped me understand a few foreign policies. Simons has done a fantastic job of critically examining Penny Wong’s career, and whether you like or dislike Senator Wong, you cannot take away her clear hard work ethic. Simons takes care in neither putting Penny Wong on a pedestal nor villainising her. This book is also a cross-section of politics and current affairs through the lens of a certain Penny Wong.
Some of my favourite passages and quotes:
- I grew up thinking of myself as half-Chinese and half-Australian,' she says. The Chinese identity does not imply any yearning for or loyalty to the present-day nation of China. Rather, it is an ethnic and cultural identification.
- He (Penny Wong's father) wanted her to speak without an accent, which for him meant 'not like a Malaysian Chinese. For Francis, English was the language of education and opportunity. Today, Penny Wong speaks very little Chinese. She says, 'I can't get the tones right.'
- Today, Wong says of her mother that she has an instinctive habit of taking the perspective of the person with less power.
- It helped confirm her view that she would have to work harder, and be tougher, if she was to make her way in the party
- There aren't many models for female political power in Australia we have trouble dealing with it. We seesaw between discomfort with women seeking and exercising influence, and idealising them as somehow better and different from men. Then we punish them if they turn out to be, after all, like other politicians - making the same kinds of compromises and engaging in the same types of political warfare.
- The tendency is to hold women leaders to different standards - idealising them, then tearing them down
- She clearly had the makings of an iconic Labor figure, and could give voice and visibility to a significant part of the community, who had never seen themselves represented in Australian politics
- She was interviewed by a journalist from the Australian, and asked a question that she would never forget. He asked me how an Asian Lesbian could represent the people of Adelaide’s northern suburbs. I was actually lost for words… She reflected that she should have responded “how can John Howard represent women?”
- An inability to build consensus has eroded the capacity for change
- A woman a complete stranger yelled “how does a slanty-eyed slut like you get two guys? She responded just lucky I guess
- ‘What is significant is not my personal attributes. Rather what would be significant about an Asian-Australian being our foreign minister is what it says about us’ it would be a powerful demonstration of Australia having overcome its racist past. Not quite but its definitely a start
And my favourite quote from the book:
People can’t be what they can’t see