Nationals Senator Bridget McKenzie,when asked about the issue on ABC’sRN Breakfast,said Price had “very strong views on the issue” but it was one for state and territory governments.
“This is obviously a topic that has to be approached very respectfully,very sensitively,” she said.
Their comments suggest the Coalition is keen to avoid any federal debate on the issue after the Queensland LNP was wedged when Katter’s Australian Party promised to force a vote on walking back abortion if the LNP were elected this weekend.
A Queensland Labor campaign official,not authorised to speak publicly,said abortion had unexpectedly become the defining issue of the campaign.
They said Labor was working on social media graphics highlighting Price’s comments as part of a final week advertising splurge worth several hundred thousand dollars.
Price’s comments helped reinforce Labor’s message that some conservative Coalition MPs were serious about limiting abortion,the official said. “People are talking about it at polling booths because they’ve seen it on TikTok and other social platforms,but also on traditional media. It’s everywhere.”
Charlotte Mortlock,founder of Hilma’s Network which aims to recruit women to the Liberals,said it was “so dangerous and incredibly reckless to fly the kite on abortion”.
“Women in Australia have been watching what’s happened in the US with great concern. The Liberal Party is not a Trumpian Republican Party,” she said.
Teal MP Allegra Spender also said she was concerned abortion was being turned into “some sort of Trumpian weapon in this country” and that Australians did not want the division.
Abortion has been heavily politicised in the United States since abortion rights case Roe v Wade was overturned by the Supreme Court in 2022.
National Party Senator Matt Canavan on Wednesday said he welcomed the Katter’s Australian Party’s efforts and thought that “maybe the pendulum has swung too far” on abortion. But he said it wasn’t a federal matter and that timing of the debate was important.
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“There should be an examination of what’s going on,especially given the changes that we’ve seen in recent years to these state laws,” he said. “[But I] don’t think this is an issue best prosecuted through the heat of an election campaign.”
Privately,several conservative Coalition MPs said they held similar views to Price but did not believe airing them publicly was worthwhile given the Commonwealth has little power to legislate on the issue.
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