Diana Johnson: ‘People Don’t Realise We Need New Abortion Laws In England And Wales’

It's not right that women in this country can still go to prison for terminating a pregnancy, says Labour MP Diana Johnson

Diana Johnson

by As told to Anna Silverman |
Updated on

People don’t realise how archaic abortion laws are in England and Wales. Patients and doctors can still go to prison if they don’t comply with an Act made in 1967 – over 50 years ago – which states that two doctors must sign off any termination. We think Northern Ireland has it the worst when it comes to terminations, but the irony is we’re heading towards a point where they could end up with more liberal laws than we have in the rest of the UK. It’s great the UK Parliament has voted to legalise abortion in Northern Ireland, but we need to do the same across England and Wales.

It’s not fair women can still be criminalised for something that’s a healthcare matter. If you buy abortion pills online, you’re committing an offence. But a lot of the women who do this are vulnerable and might even be in an abusive relationship. Surely we want to support, not criminalise them? How they are treated shouldn’t be based on criminal law.

I want abortion to be properly regulated and the criminal law removed. I have a new Abortion Bill drafted and ready to go. However, changes to abortion law could also be made by amending other Government Bills such as the Domestic Abuse Bill.

We have to make sure that people have a home in the Labour party and that we have policies people can identify with. Jeremy Corbyn will be the leader taking us into the next election. Whether we have left the EU or not will affect how the next general election is fought, and if we haven’t left the EU, Labour will have to have a much clearer message for voters.

While I understand that some party members feel at the moment that they don’t want to stay in the party, I do hope they will reconsider and rejoin the party in the future. The Labour Party has always been a broad church and appealed across all different social groups and communities. My constituents in Hull North desperately need a Labour Government and I will be fighting hard to deliver one for them.

I’m from a seat that voted Leave in the referendum and I’ve seen quite a shift in my constituency, with many now recognising what Leave means. I remember Tory MP David Davis saying Brexit would have no downside and we’d retain all the benefits of EU membership. That’s just not true. Theresa May’s inability to work across the Commons was her own undoing in failing to get a deal we could all agree on

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Danielle Rowley, 28, Midlothian Scottish Labour MP

Speaking about her groundbreaking announcement, Danielle perfectly highlighted just how ridiculous it is that it's even a taboo to mention your period. She said on Twitter:'A lot of unexpected coverage of me talking about my period - which is great, but also highlights the need to talk about periods more openly.A woman mentioning her period shouldn't be such huge news - let's use this opportunity and work together to get to a place where it's not!'

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Jess Phillips, 36, Birmingham Yardley Labour MP

Jess brought social media trolls to account when she called for those who post abusive messages online to lose their anonymity. The MP told parliament that she once received 600 rape threats in one night and is threatened with violence and aggression every single day online. The online community is so hostile towards women that Amnesty International have led a campaign calling for Twitter to take greater responsibility for preventing online abuse. Jess told the House of Commons that people should have to disclose their real identity to social media platforms, with hope that it would not only deter people from abusing women online but also enable us to hold them to account.

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Heidi Allen, 43, South Cambridgeshire Conservative MP

Heidi, alongside Jess Phillips, shared an emotional account of her own abortion with parliament earlier this month. In an attempt to reform Northern Ireland's abortion laws, she told the Cambridge independent that she felt she needed to share her story:'I had intended to say it because I had a feeling nobody else would.'I thought it probably needed saying.'I suppose it is very easy to make issues like that just about procedure and legislation and words and policy but, actually, it is about people's lives.'Jess Phillips too opened up about her own abortion, also sharing harrowing stories from women in Northern Ireland who had terminated pregnancies.

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Stella Creasy, 41, Walthamstow Labour MP

The original lead of cross-party calls for Northern Ireland's abortion laws to be brought in line with the rest of the UK's, Stella received tons of hate mail over her campaign to protect women's right to choose. It was in her call for debate over abortion that Heidi Allen and Jess Philips were able to talk about their own terminations.

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Penny Mourdant, 45, Portsmouth North Conservative MP

The Minister for Women and Equalities, Penny Mourdant launched the National Action Plan on Women, Peace and Securitywhich calls for more women to be at the centre of the DFID's peace, security and humanitarian programmes. As secretary of state for international development, she has attempted to reform the aid sector by creating an independent safeguarding unit that prevents exploitation. This comes in the wake of a series of sex scandals against leading charities earlier this year.

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Wera Hobhouse, 58, Bath Liberal Democrat MP

Wera Hobhouse brought Gina Martin's upskirting campaign to parliament as a private members bill set to outlaw the vile crime. While the bill was subsequently blocked by two male MPs, a third reading of the bill is set to continue on the 6th of July with Gina stating 'the Government Bill will become law as it'll get through the later stages more quickly and won't be objected to.'

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Maria Miller, 54, Basingstoke Conservative MP

It was off the back of the upskirting bill that Maria Miller and Jess Phillips have met with Wera Hobhouse in an attempt to include a revenge porn amendment. It would ensure there was a blanket ban on voyeuristic images regardless of the intention in taking it, as the MPs feared people would attempt to bend the wording of the upskirting law to avoid conviction by arguing they took the image with no intention of causing distress. They also wanted to introduce an amendment that would ban false pornographic images, in which faces are photoshopped onto explicit images. However, they were told it was impossible to introduce further amendments. This comes after Love Island stars Zara McDermott and Laura Anderson became victims of revenge porn this week.

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Mhairi Black, Paisley and Renfrewshire South SNP MP

As part of the discussion about classing misogyny as a hate crime, Mhairi Black spoke out about the misogynistic and homophobic abuse she receives online every day. She also asked parliament to reflect on their own environment, stating, 'Only a few weeks ago I was physically pressed up against a Member (of Parliament) in the voting lobby who is accused of sexual misconduct because there's so little room.'Acknowledging she has the 'same right and influence as any other elected man', she spoke up for the female staff who aren't in her position.

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Melanie Onn, 39, Great Grimsby Labour MP

Leading the charge to make misogyny a hate crime, Melanie highlighted the 'link between low-level harassment of women and more serious sexual assaults' that was found by Westminster's all-party group on domestic violence. In her constituency, the rate of domestic violence is particularly high. As a result, she has called for a law change to have misogynistic acts such as wolf-whistling, leering and sexual comments in public to be made a criminal offence.

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Monica Lennon, 37, Central Scotland Scottish Labour MSP

Monica introduced a Member's Bill into Scottish parliament that would see the creation of free universal access to sanitary products. Proposing also that schools, colleges and universities provide free sanitary products in their toilets, she led the campaign that stands to end period poverty in Scotland.

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