Two thousand people “stood in the rain to get a voice in the House”* yesterday at the homebirth rally outside Parliament House in Canberra. Two thousand people and it didn’t warrant any TV media attention. (And the obligatory online newspaper report decided that there were no men present at the rally.) But three channels eagerly ran the story of a religious elder who had decided to keep working past the age of 75. Yeah, that’s “news”. Sure.
Two hundred people pitched up at Nicola Roxon’s office in Melbourne in August, and two thousand travelled to Canberra yesterday to ask her to listen to their objections to the legislation she’s proposed to Parliament. But, as Shadow Health Minister Peter Dutton pointed out, she doesn’t have the common decency to face the objectors and hear what we have to say. Instead her main point of defense is “Any attempts by the Liberal Party to pretend that these bills take away rights are simply incorrect.” But if the bills ban midwives from working outside a clinical setting then they do take away every pregnant Australian woman’s right to choose the person who provides her care, and by default, her right to choose the place where she will give birth and the right to be involved in the planning of her birth.
On Friday midwives won a backhanded reprieve in the form of a temporary exemption until July 2012. In other words: election year. Labor is not prepared to risk this becoming an election issue, so they are shelving it until after we’ve all been to the polls. It means two more years of lobbying to keep this issue in the minds of our members of parliament. If we don’t, Labor could potentially slip this legislation through when no one is looking, when the dust has settled, when men and women and midwives have had to turn their backs for a moment to tend to their other children.
* Paraphrasing Ian Macfarlane, House of Representatives 7 Sept 2009: “…the only time this government, this Prime Minister and that minister listen is when women go and stand in the rain, supported by their partners, to get a voice in this House.” (Hansard)