Well, it's about time that Fielding came to the table!
Senate fight looms over abortions
Senate fight looms over abortions
Go the Dems.Senate fight looms over abortions
By Misha Schubert and David Wroe
October 4, 2005
WOMEN may be made to wait three days after deciding to have an abortion before they can have the operation, if the Family First party has its way.
In its formal policy platform, the social-conservative party declares itself opposed to abortion but stops short of calling for an end to public funding for it.
Instead it demands a greater level of "informed consent" before an abortion, arguing women should have a chance (but no compulsion) to see an ultrasound of the foetus before making a decision.
Family First's call comes as Democrats leader Lyn Allison warned women's reproductive rights were being quietly eroded and could be diminished further if the Government horse-traded with pro-life Nationals senators to get other legislation through the knife-edge Senate.
The Democrats will introduce an amendment to overturn the ban on mifepristone, the medical abortion drug previously known as RU486.
Although the amendment faces likely defeat in the Government-controlled upper house, Senator Allison said she wanted to force abortion into the public debate because "I've seen so much erosion of women's reproductive rights it scares me. "I think it's a very dangerous environment, but not a lot of people are aware it's going on. We need to defend our ground". She cited Government funding for pro-life family planning groups and the refusal by some pharmacists to sell the morning-after pill to younger women as examples of this erosion.
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Family First, whose Victorian senator Steve Fielding could hold the balance of power if just one Government senator crosses the floor, also argued women should be given even more comprehensive information on any physical and psychological risks in proceeding with abortion.
"Women should be advised of the high risk of long-term psychological impact of the abortion, including profound and sometimes lasting post-abortion grief and depression," his new party policy states.
"Family First supports the view that women seeking information on abortion be given adequate time in which to consider the advice and information before making a decision to proceed to termination (this could take the form of a 72-hour cooling-off period)."
Nationals senator Barnaby Joyce, who is a pro-lifer, said he was encouraged by Family First's position but said the issue was above party politics. He reiterated his vow that he would not horse-trade on abortion, which he said would "diminish the issue".
Senator Allison said most women already waited several days and there was no need to legislate a waiting period. "You don't just walk in off the street and they say, 'Lie down here'."
She said women in France, New Zealand, Sweden, the United States and Britain had access to mifepristone, yet Australian women were denied the choice.
"Abortion in this country is legal, and there is no reason why there should not be another avenue for non-surgical abortion made available to women," she said.
Mifepristone, which can be used to induce abortion up to the second trimester, was banned by the Federal Government to secure the vote of former Tasmanian senator Brian Harradine on the original sale of Telstra in 1996.