Jacinta Nampijinpa Price at the ARC Conference on Tuesday.Credit:Nick Moir
Abortion is legal across all Australian states and territories,but political debate on the issue has been turbocharged by conservative pushes to change the law in Queensland and South Australia.
Price,in her first public comments on abortion,said she could not support late-term abortions because “our aim should always be on maintaining life”.
“Late term is anywhere past the[first] trimester as far as I’m concerned … Full-term becomes infanticide and I cannot agree with that,” she told this masthead at the conservative ARC conference in Sydney.
Her stance challenges laws that make abortions accessible until at least 20 weeks in most states and territories. After that,pregnant women generally require approval from at least two doctors,but doctors say these make up just 1 per cent of abortions in Australia.
Terminations late in a pregnancy are typically for serious medical or personal circumstances:genetic syndromes;late-diagnosed major fetal abnormalities;severe growth restrictions;or where continuing the pregnancy would severely harm the mother’s mental or physical health.
Protesters outside the South Australian parliament last week before a narrowly defeated bill to outlaw terminations after 27 weeks and six days.Credit:AAPIMAGE
Price backed her Coalition colleagues,Matt Canavan and Alex Antic,who along with United Australia Party senator Ralph Babet have seized on the issue and tried to introduce “born alive” laws that protect fetuses when a woman seeks a late-term abortion.