A Twitterstorm of complaint (and appreciation) erupted in response to last week's Herald on Sunday Top 100 election tweeters. There were interesting critiques of the list's makeup. One complaint concerned its perceived lack of women.
Labour Party organiser Keir Leslie (@KeirLeslie) complained: "That @bryce-edwards list of tweeters to follow? 60 men, 24 women, 14 unknown, 2 who I forgot to code. That's a 2:1 men:women ratio".
More specifically, CTU President Helen Kelly (@helenkellyCTU) criticised the makeup of our "thinkers" category: "there is only 1 woman 'thinker' and 8 men. Guess they r 2 busy barefoot in the kitchen."
Another tweeter, Justine Sachs (@nerdyjewishgrrl) complained: "I feel like there was a deliberate exclusion of women and I'm pretty disgusted." Her own Top 50 list of Twitter's best female political commentators included Green candidate @MaramaDavidson.
Nicole Skews (@ColeyTangerina) - a Green Party staffer - also tweeted: "Oh no, NOW I get it, I'll never be a Bryce Edwards activist to watch because period period uterus sex woman puppy uterus sex ladyparts."