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Abbott's mostly male cabinet

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Australian opposition leader Tony Abbott, third left, and his daughters Frances, left, Louise, second right, and Bridget, right, and his wife Margaret, second left, come to the stage to celebrate his election victory in Sydney, 7 September 2013Image source, AP
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Mr Abbott, centre, has been criticised for his attitude towards women

Tony Abbott has often faced criticism for his attitude towards women. That criticism has sometimes been emphatic, . It has sometimes been merely embarrassed, courtesy of .

Mr Abbott's new cabinet, unveiled on Monday, will do little to lessen the flak, but suggests the soon-to-be prime minister is not unduly concerned. Just one of the 19 cabinet members is a woman. Mr Abbott said he himself was . But , not too disappointed to do anything about it.

The Labor Party (which had six women in its cabinet before it lost the election last week) was quick to try and capitalise. The pointed out that Afghanistan now has more women (three) in its cabinet than Australia.

But in fact, in the past, Australia has had a relatively good record on gender equality in politics, as from the University of New South Wales just before this month's election points out.

As Kenny points out that is slipping, but even in this current Australian parliament, when all the votes are finally counted, 39 of the 150 members in the House of Representatives will be women. That's 26%. Far from equality, but compiled in February 2013 and you'll see it would rank Australia considerably ahead of both Britain (22.5%) and the United States (17.8%)in terms of female representation.

The issue has reopened a debate here about when selecting parliamentary candidates. The Labor Party, which of course had the country's first female prime minister in Julia Gillard, has had such a system in place since 1994.

Tony Abbott and his Liberal Party have firmly rejected quotas up to now, preferring selection "on merit". His first cabinet selection suggests that position is unlikely to change soon.