Skip to content
Political

Bill to protect viable late term babies defeated

Family First Party 2 mins read

Statement from Deepa Mathew, Family First’s lead candidate for the South Australian Upper House

 

Family First is disappointed that a bill to protect unborn children past 22 weeks and 6 days was defeated last night in the Legislative Council. Our decision to rebuild Family First was taken after the SA Liberals introduced abortion-to-birth legislation in 2021, signalling the removal of meaningful protections for unborn babies and their mothers.

 

 

We understand the Bill, moved by Independent MLC Sarah Game, would still have allowed late-term terminations when the mother’s life is at risk or in the case of a severe foetal anomaly — and yet politicians voted it down 11-8.

 

Since abortion-to-birth was legalised in SA via the Termination of Pregnancy Act, 79 healthy, viable unborn babies with healthy mothers at non-emergency risk have been legally terminated beyond 22 weeks and 6 days.

 

The method is feticide where a long needle filled with potassium chloride is injected through the mother’s uterus and into the baby’s heart to kill the child. No pain relief is administered, even though it is incontrovertible that babies at this gestation and younger feel pain.

 

If the media accurately reported these practices, South Australians would not support it.

 

That is why Family First is working to elect pro-life parliamentarians — starting with my campaign for the South Australian Parliament at the March election. While ever this injustice continues, Family First will fight.

 

The defeat is a setback — but it is not the end of the battle for the protection of unborn children and for better support for their mothers.

 

 


Contact details:

[email protected]

Media

More from this category

  • Political
  • 21/01/2026
  • 07:42
Family First Party

Libs drive stake in the heart of free speech, endanger groups like Family First

Family First is worried it may be banned as a “hate group” after the Liberals backed Labor’s antisemitism, hate and extremism laws. “There are…

  • Contains:
  • International News, Political
  • 20/01/2026
  • 16:04
Monash University

Monash expert: Japan’s prime minister calls snap election

This week Japan’s prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, called a snap election. She will dissolve parliament on 23 January with Japan expecting to head to the polls on 8 February. A Monash expert is available to talk about the snap election and what it could mean for Japan and politics in the region. Available to comment: Associate Professor Charles Crabtree, Senior Lecturer, School of Social Sciences, Faculty of Arts Contact: +1 720 236 0778 or [email protected] The following comments can be attributed to Senior Lecturer Crabtree: “Takaichi has called a snap election for 8 February, hoping to translate her striking popularity…

  • Political
  • 20/01/2026
  • 15:02
Dr Monique Ryan, Independent Member for Kooyong

Dr Monique Ryan highlights concerns about the Government’s rushed Hate Speech and Migration Laws

Following passage of theCombatting Antisemitism, Hate and Extremism (Criminal and Migration Laws) Bill 2026, Independent Member for Kooyong, Dr. Monique Ryan, said today: “Afterthe Bondi tragedy, itwas critical that our Parliament united behindlawstoprotect Australians from gun violence and hate speech.Our communities–particularlythe AustralianJewishcommunity – have been shocked andtraumatisedbythatsenseless act of violence.They want us to take action to ensure their safety andtheir freedom.ButIhaveserious concerns aboutthis legislation. "Australians want us to get this right. Poor policymakingwon’tmake our constituents safer. Terrorismisn’tonly an attack on lives;it’salso an attack onourconfidence in the idea that democracies can remain both secure and free. Legislation on the run will…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.