London, 8 April 2010 - The Society for the Protection of Unborn Children (SPUC), the world's oldest pro-life lobbying and educational organisation, has warned people not to fall for David Cameron's pitch on abortion time limits. Mr Cameron has told readers of The Catholic Herald newspaper that he supports a modest reduction in the abortion [upper time] limit."
John Smeaton, SPUC director, commented: "The issue of the upper time limit for social abortions is at best a dangerous distraction. At worst, it will entrench discrimination against disabled children and set the scene for an expansion of abortion.
"By 'abortion limit', Mr Cameron only means the 24-week limit for abortions done on social grounds. As he made clear in August 2008, he wants abortion up to birth on disabled children to remain available.
"Mr Cameron and Andrew Lansley, the Conservative party health spokesman, have made clear that they support wider access to abortion in various ways. If there is a free vote by MPs, as promised by Mr Cameron, it will provide the pro-abortion lobby with an opportunity to increase the numbers of abortions, as happened under the Conservative administration under Margaret Thatcher.
"Mr Cameron is only endorsing a reduction of two to four weeks (and for social abortions only). This ignores the vast majority (87% or more) of abortions which are performed before 12 weeks. Only one to two per cent of abortions are performed after 20 weeks. There is a serious danger of MPs who back a cosmetic lowering of the upper time-limit for social abortions of voting in favour of wider access to social abortions earlier in pregnancy.
"In the last parliament, all the amendments calling for reductions in the upper time limit for social abortions were rejected by large majorities. There is no reason to believe that the new parliament will be significantly less pro-abortion than the old one. Most MPs will only accept restrictions on late-term abortions in return for measures making abortion more easily available in other ways. The number of abortions resulting from these changes would exceed the small number (about 750) of social abortions after 20 or 22 weeks. In any case, those doctors who want to do late abortions can simply get around any lower time-limit, by falsifying gestational age and/or fudging the grounds.
"SPUC is political, not party political. Gordon Brown and Nick Clegg, the leaders of the other two main parties, share David Cameron's pro-abortion record and position", concluded Mr Smeaton.
Notes for editors:
"I should like to make my personal position clear, because it has been misrepresented in the past few days. I am pro-choice. I support a woman’s right to abortion—to faster, safer and quicker abortion than is available at the moment, particularly in the first trimester. That is my position ... [O]ne of the main problems is that many young women who present at a hospital or at a doctor’s are made to wait two to four weeks before a termination. I want to make my position clear: I am not against abortion per se. Actually, I would go further: I would like the morning-after pill to be available from every school nurse and in every supermarket pharmacy—and it should be free for young girls, and not £25 at the chemist’s, as it is at the moment." [Hansard, 20 May 2008]
"I have no issue with abortion at the right time." [Daily Mail, 6 March 2008]
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