Right to Life Australia
Right to Life Australia (The Right to Life Australia Inc) operated as an unincorporated organisation lobbying on consistent life ethic policies such as total opposition to abortion, euthanasia and stem cell research. Margaret Tighe was the last known President[1] until retiring in 2010[2] and Toni Turnbull of South Australia was the last known Vice President. While the group states it was a non-denominational Christian organisation, most of those involved identify as Roman Catholics.
The Right to Life Australia Inc was established after tensions arose between the National Right to Life Association and the Associations Victoria-based branch. According to contributors, the tension resulted from 'tactics that embarrassed the otherwise conservative right-to-lifers'.[3] By 1980 the new Right to Life Australia group was drafting appeal letters for funds despite what was described at the time as "a lot of objections to the establishment of this organisation".[4]
The Right to Life Australia Inc organisation was begun by President Margaret Tighe as a national organisation. However, there were already state-based groups like Right to Life Western Australia that did not wish to join a national body.[5] Right to Life WA declined to join a national coalition of organisations lobbying against abortion and voluntary assisted dying and criticised the "proliferation of pro-life groups and associations".
History
The Right To Life Australia Inc. was an unincorporated entity established in Brunswick, Victoria in 2000.[6] Its trading name since 2000 was Right to Life Australia.[7]
It ran campaigns and public demonstrations primarily against members of feminist network EMILY's List.[8] Right to Life Australia members also lobbied politicians and gave talks to community groups.
Right to Life Australia organised an annual conference and a newsletter, and it funded Pregnancy Counseling Australia to provide directive advice against the termination of pregnancy.
Right to Life Australia Inc was involved in passing of the 1996 Euthanasia Bill and the Research Involving Human Embryos Bill 2002. In 2005, The Right to Life Inc protested outside Alfred Hospital on the Maria Korp case when Victoria's Public Advocate announced that Maria would begin palliative care after 163 days of being in a persistent vegetative state.[9] Despite protest from Right to Life Australia Inc, ABC radio reported that extensive consultation with close friends, family and Maria's priest as well as all medical advice concluded that palliative care was in Maria's best interest.[10]
Campaigns and actions
The Fertility Control Clinic was opened in East Melbourne in 1972 by a group of feminists seeking to improve accessibility of abortion. It subsequently became the site of most Right to Life protests.
In 1978, 10 members of Right to Life were forcibly removed from the clinic by police after they sat in a hallway outside an operating theatre and refused to move. Among them was then President Margaret Tighe.[11]
In 1986, the ember for Lowe, Michael Maher raised two publications from Margaret Tighe in the House of Representatives on claims of misrepresentation. Maher stated that his words and position were misrepresented in a report by the then Victorian Right to Life organisation authorised by Tighe and in electorate materials distributed by her. Maher stated: "She chose, for her own political reasons, to ignore that statement. I just wanted to state correctly on the record my reasons, and I thank the House for giving me this time today. The misrepresentation of my views does this lady's cause no good."[12]
In 1996, independent member of the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly, Michael Moore, referred to Margaret Tighe of the Right to Life Movement while speaking on euthanasia, saying, "...in the media, some people, including Margaret Tighe of the Right to Life movement, were able to say that this is a shame for Australia... It is the people like Margaret Tighe who should wear the shame, Mr Speaker...They will wear the shame for allowing these people to suffer".[13]
In 1998, the Melbourne University Debating Society held a debate on whether Victoria should follow Western Australia's path of abortion law reform. The anti-abortion position was argued by Meredith Gawler, former President of the University's Right to Life Club and President of The Right to Life, Margaret Tighe.[14] The results of the debate was a clear victory for the pro-choice position.
In 2001, Peter Knight walked into the privately run East Melbourne abortion provider carrying a rifle and other weapons, as well as 16 litres of kerosene. Knight fatally shot a security guard before clinic staff and patients overpowered him.[15] Knight later stated he planned to use homemade gags and door jambs to restrain the patients and staff inside the clinic before dousing them with kerosene. There were 15 staff members and 26 patients present that day. He then planned to move on to target another Melbourne abortion provider.[16] In a radio interview on the day of the fatal shooting, The Right to Life Australia Inc President expressed sympathy with Knight saying violence was to be expected "because people get angry at what goes on in such places".[17] That sparked outrage and led to the popularization of the pro-choice chant "Right to Life, your name's a lie, you don't care if women die!".[18]
In 2007, Right to Life successfully campaigned to ban a book titled The Peaceful Pill by Dr Phillip Nitschke. The Classification Review Board stated the book was not banned on moral grounds but because it encouraged illegal activity.[19]
Right to Life lobbied heavily against the 2008 Victorian Abortion Law Reform Bill introduced by Upper House member Candy Broad. The lobbying was unsuccessful and the bill passed with overwhelming support, resulting in the Menhennit ruling (1969) being codified and access to abortion being extended to include terminations after 23 weeks gestation.[20]
In 2013, Right to Life Australia was questioned about anti-abortion flyers distributed in Albury. The flyers were printed on the back of letters containing personal information and may have breached privacy laws. Included in the material was a 1988 letter from Corporate Affairs Victoria that detailed outstanding lodging fees and threatened to de-register the company. While then President, Margaret Tighe, claimed the flyers were unrelated to Right to Life Australia, the flyers also featured her signature.[21]
In 2017, Right to Life Australia campaigned against the Victorian Voluntary Assisted Dying Bill. The campaign was unsuccessful and the bill passed.[22] From 19 June 2019, Victorians were able to access voluntary assisted dying if they were in late stages of advanced disease.[23]
Since the termination of pregnancy has been decriminalised across all Australian jurisdictions, Right to Life Australia has lobbied to re-criminalise abortion with the President stating in 2023: "I think there should be a penalty. I think we should be lenient to some extent".[24]
References
- ^ "Trove". trove.nla.gov.au. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ Allan, L (29 November 2010). "Margaret Tighe. The Most Powerful Woman in Victoria". Tasmanian Times. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ McVey, Judy (1983). "The Right to Life Offensive since 1969". Hecate. 9 (2): 35–43.
- ^ Hedley, J (2017). ""On the Side of the Saints": A History of the Sydney Catholic Pro-Life Organisation Family Life International". (Thesis - University of Notre Dame Australia).
- ^ "Divided we fail? The fracturous state of the pro-life movement". The Record. 3 February 2009. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- ^ "ABN 12 774 010 375". Australian Business Register. Australian Government. November 2014. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ "ABN Lookup". abr.business.gov.au. 1 November 2014. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ Lyle Allan (2010). The Right to Life campaigned in Victoria in the 2010 election in nine seats, with seven pro-choice politicians replaced with pro-life politicians. "Margaret Tighe. The most powerful woman in Victoria," in Tasmanian Times, 30 November 2010. http://tasmaniantimes.com/index.php?/weblog/article/margaret-tighe.-the-most-powerful-woman-in-victoria/
- ^ Szymanska, Paulina (21 April 2018). "Case 82: Maria Korp". Casefile: True Crime Podcast. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ "Key dates in Maria Korp saga". The Sydney Morning Herald. 5 August 2005. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ "Anti-abortion protesters carried from clinic". Canberra Times. 27 April 1978. Retrieved 15 March 2024 – via Trove.
- ^ Maher, M (19 March 1986). "House Hansard, Personal Explanations". Parliament of Australia. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ ACT, Legislative Assembly for the. "Hansard of the Legislative Assembly for the ACT". www.hansard.act.gov.au. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ "Abortion law reform debated | Green Left". www.greenleft.org.au. 20 May 1998. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ Mottram, Padraic Murphy and Murray (13 July 2019). "From the Archives, 2001: Abortion clinic attacked in East Melbourne". The Age. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ "'Remorseless' recluse gets life". The Age. 20 November 2002. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ "Anti-abortion Terror re-emerges in Melbourne". Freedom Socialist Party. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ "Anti-abortion Terror re-emerges in Melbourne". Freedom Socialist Party. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ "Right to Life group welcomes euthanasia book ban". ABC News. 25 February 2007. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ Symons, Ainsley (2014). "Anti-Abortion Campaigning and the Political Process". Recorder. 279 (2).
- ^ Mills, Tammy (5 June 2013). "Anti-abortion flyer may breach privacy". Blue Mountains Gazette. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
- ^ "Right to Die will become a Duty to Die". Mirage News. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- ^ Services, Department of Health & Human. "Voluntary assisted dying". www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- ^ "Strong support for abortion in Australia in wake of decriminalisation". SBS News. Retrieved 14 March 2024.