Last month, a truly awful abortion amendment was withdrawn from the UK Government’s Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill. Its intention was to legalise abortion to birth for any reason in England and Wales.
Had it succeeded, the door would have been opened to sex-selective abortion and ever-increasing numbers of abortions. In a context where 200,000 abortions took place in England and Wales last year alone and where 9.5 million have taken place since 1967, the situation could hardly be made worse. I’d love to tell you that the amendment was withdrawn because of a growing concern in Parliament about the abortion lobby. The truth, I suspect, is more complex. Tacking an amendment that would have resulted in major social change onto another Bill is a sure-fire way of irking colleagues in the Commons. The MP who tabled the amendment, Diana Johnson, herself claimed it was only a ‘probing amendment’ and she never planned to push it to a vote. At the same time, it was encouraging to see and hear stories of how Christians did their bit – writing to our MPs and engaging with the issue clearly had an impact. Anecdotally I’ve been told that MPs received more than 71,000 emails and letters. For anyone who has been used to being rebuffed by their MP in recent times, it is surely an encouraging reminder to keep going. Sometimes our efforts at lobbying do help to make a difference.
The day after a radical pro-abortion amendment was considered in the Commons, a seminal, pro-life court case began. Down’s syndrome campaigner Heidi Crowter, alongside Máire Lea-Wilson, whose eleven-month-old son Aidan has Down’s syndrome, is arguing that current abortion law discriminates against people with disabilities. Whilst most abortions take place under ‘Ground C’, where the limit is 24 weeks, babies with a ‘serious handicap’ can be aborted to birth. That’s been widely interpreted to include entirely treatable conditions like club foot, cleft lip and Down’s syndrome as well.
The idol of autonomy in the West
If I asked you to name one of the great cultural idols of the secular Western world, what would you …