http://www.greenleft.org.au

Why Howard hates sole mothers and lesbians

  BY LISA MACDONALD
When Prime Minister John Howard announced on August 2 that the federal 
government would move to allow states to outlaw single women's and 
lesbians' access to in vitro fertilisation (IVF), he was at great pains to 
emphasise that this was neither discrimination nor an attack on women's 
right to reproductive choice. Rather, he claimed, it was an assertion of 
"the fundamental right of a child within our society to have a reasonable 
expectation ... of the care and affection of both a mother and a father".

With these carefully chosen words Howard appealed to the widespread idea -- 
that children are better off with two parents, even if this is not always 
possible -- in order to undermine another widely supported idea: that women 
have a right not to be discriminated against.

The Howard government's family policy since it was elected in 1996 shows 
that his trumpeting of the rights of the child is utterly fake. If Howard 
and his colleagues were genuinely concerned about children's right to a 
healthy, happy upbringing, they would not have cut welfare and social 
services funding, or facilitated real wage cuts, or be privatising 
education and health care or undermining the Family Court.

And they would have acknowledged governmental responsibility for the stolen 
generations of Aboriginal children.

Howard's new-found concern for children's rights is cover for his old 
concern: to roll back as rapidly as possible public acceptance of ideas and 
rights which undermine the dominance of the "married with children" form of 
family.

_ Public spending_

To strengthen the nuclear family, Howard has a lot of work to do. Since the 
end of World War II, the marriage rate in Australia has been steadily 
decreasing. And although fewer people are getting married, there has been a 
steady increase in the number of divorces, most of them initiated by women.

A growing proportion of women are having fewer children, later in life, or 
are not having children at all, and they're doing this in order to spend 
less time at home, outside the labour market.

These trends, which are occurring in all developed countries, pose a 
growing problem for the capitalist class, which has always relied on the 
family to cover the bulk of the costs and labour involved in generating and 
regenerating the work force. With more women having to spend more time in 
waged work because they do not live in a nuclear family, there is more 
pressure on the state to provide many of the services that women have 
traditionally provided unpaid at home (child-care, aged care, health care 
and so on).

Since more public spending on social services means less on subsidising 
corporate profits, a major plank in the neo-liberal economic program being 
implemented around the world today is to drastically reduce spending on 
public services and push as much as possible of that service provision onto 
individuals within the "private" domain of the family home. But after 
decades of an expanding welfare system, moves to erode it meet resistance, 
even if only at the ballot box.

Young people quite rightly object to being forced to live with their 
parents beyond the age of 16 simply because there are no jobs. Grandparents 
object to being rendered unpaid carers of yet another generation because 
their children can't get community care for their children. Women object to 
having to leave the work force because they can no longer get good quality 
care for their aged or disabled relatives.

Certainly, the government can take initiatives like Howard's "national 
families strategy", announced in June 1999, which allocates $16.5 million 
to relationship support services, including a trial of marriage preparation 
courses for 2000 engaged couples. But such measures are just tinkering 
around the edges; they're constantly undermined by women's unwillingness to 
give up the real gains -- legal, economic and social -- that they have made 
over the last 30 years.

Those gains include majority acceptance of the idea that women are entitled 
to equality at home and at work, so Howard and Co. cannot insist that women 
return to economic dependence, physical isolation and reproductive slavery 
without paying a big political price. First they have to build support for 
traditional gender roles and relations.

The government is approaching this task from a number of angles.

It is using the "men's rights" movement as a battering ram against feminist 
ideas: last September, it approved two $50,000 grants over two years to the 
Lone Fathers Association to develop a peak body to advocate for "fathers' 
rights". At the same time, it is targeting more vulnerable women for 
legislative and economic attack: migrants, sole mothers, lesbians, women on 
welfare, etc.

      _Sole mothers_

At the top of Howard's target list are sole mothers. The government's 
punitive approach to women with dependent children who leave their marriage 
has become very clear. Over the last 18 months it has undermined the Family 
Court, encouraged the questioning of no-fault divorce, reduced maintenance 
payments, cut funding to legal aid, lowered the children's age cut-off 
point for the sole parent pension, eroded after-school and vacation 
child-care services, and, just last week, decided to inflict "mutual 
obligation" conditions on all recipients of sole parent payments.

Howard is focusing on sole mothers because they are living proof that 
marriage need not be "'til death us do part", that women can survive and 
raise children without a husband, and that children can grow into capable 
and well-adjusted adults with just one parent.

As well as challenging capitalist family ideology, sole mothers cost the 
state money that it would rather not spend on the working class. 
Furthermore, the right of sole mothers to receive welfare assistance is a 
public acknowledgment that society should take some responsibility for 
child rearing, an acknowledgment that the rulers want reversed.

The fact that around one marriage in three ends in divorce, and therefore 
that sole parenthood is experienced by a significant proportion of people 
at some time, means that governments have to be careful about how they 
attack sole parents. When the Howard government withdrew its $50,000 annual 
grant to the National Council for Single Women and their Children last 
September, for example, public protest forced it to reinstate the funding 
almost immediately.

So, rather than launch a direct attack on sole mothers, Howard invokes 
children's "right" to be brought up by a couple. It sounds so reasonable: 
it is obviously more difficult -- financially, physically and emotionally 
-- for one adult rather than two to raise a child. It's a question of 
having someone to share the responsibility and workload.

But in your run-of-the-mill two-parent family, the load is far from being 
shared equally. One of the two parents -- the mother -- shoulders most of 
the burden.

It's not really about the number of parents. If it were, why stop at two? 
Why not have three parents, or five? The more parents, the more love, care 
and financial support the child/ren would receive. But collective parenting 
is absolutely not part of Howard's agenda.

      _Gender roles_

The assertion of children's "right" to have two parents is really about 
children being raised within heterosexual marriages that provide them with 
unambiguous gender role models and expectations.

Boys learn that men's mission in life is to work as hard as possible for 
the boss to provide as well as possible for their economic dependents (wife 
and children). Girls learn that women's double shift of waged work and 
unpaid cooking, cleaning, nursing and counselling is the price of romantic 
love and motherhood. And they all learn to be heterosexual and to want to 
get married and raise children of their own.

Divorce, sole parenting and especially homosexual relationships are 
anathema to this self-perpetuating system of social conformity and control.

And it's not just the employers who benefit from the gender-divided family. 
Men, too, have a vested interest in the "married with children" set-up: it 
provides them with cheap housekeeping, sexual services and child-care.

So, when the men's rights activists squeal, "If lesbians and unmarried 
women are allowed to have babies whenever they want, fathers will become 
irrelevant and men will lose their role in society", they are picking up on 
a truth: disconnecting conception and child-rearing from marriage does 
undermine the main pillar of men's privileged position vis-a-vis women in 
capitalist society.

Howard's intention to exclude lesbians from access to fertility services is 
shaped by the same aims: to exclude all unmarried women from the 
possibility of rearing children and to actively discourage all social 
relations that undermine the ideology and practice of nuclear family life.

The homophobic argument that children need a male and a female parent makes 
sense only in a society which requires conformity to rigidly defined 
different norms of behaviour for each sex. Without such norms, the 
traditional family could not function.

      _No conscience vote_

Whether or not the government gets this particular change to the Sex 
Discrimination Act through parliament, we can be sure that it won't be the 
last attempt to weaken laws that protect women's right to economic and 
social equality.

At this point in the neo-liberal backlash, lesbians and sole mothers are 
the softest targets. But once they've been dealt with, full-time working 
mothers, women who return to work too soon after the birth of a child, 
women who refuse to give up their jobs to look after sick relatives, all 
will be in the conservatives' gun sights.

How successful they are at picking us off will depend in part on the 
response of the feminist, gay and lesbian, and workers' movements to this 
attack. The Sex Discrimination Act may not be the strongest of safeguards 
against gender discrimination (its effectiveness being largely dependent on 
the willingness and ability of women's agencies and trade unions to enforce 
it), but as a partial barrier to the bosses' and governments' efforts to 
push women back into domestic slavery, it must be defended against all attacks.

Women's reproductive rights are just that: rights to be exercised by 
individual women according to their own needs and desires. They are not 
matters of personal conscience for others. The opposition parties must not 
allow a conscience vote on this issue: they must stop Howard's 
anti-feminist, anti-women, anti-choice vision from becoming law.


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