A UK politician has demanded reforms in the rule book of the British Parliament, after she was asked not to bring her three-month-old baby into the House of Commons.
Stella Creasy, a legislator of the Labour Party, tweeted on 24 November that she had received an email from the House of Commons authorities, telling her that she could not bring her child in the Chamber as it goes against the rules of behavior and courtesies in the House.
Creasy posted the letter in the tweet and wrote, "Apparently the Parliament has written a rule which means I can’t take my well behaved, 3-month old sleeping baby when I speak in the chamber". She added that mothers are not to be seen or heard in the "mother of all parliament".
Apparently Parliament has written a rule which means I can’t take my well behaved, 3-month old, sleeping baby when I speak in chamber. (Still no rule on wearing masks btw).
Mothers in the mother of all parliament are not to be seen or heard it seems….#21stCenturyCalling pic.twitter.com/rKB7WbYQrL
— stellacreasy (@stellacreasy) November 23, 2021
The legislator has appeared with her son at the adjoining Westminster Hall on 23 November. She would also nurse her son regularly and she has earlier also taken her daughter to the House of Commons chamber.
According to reports, she received the letter as the rules had been changed recently. The rule book was last updated in September and was issued by the speaker and deputy speakers and applies to the Chamber of House of Commons
Creasy has been calling for changes in the parliamentary rule book for quite some time. The MP's call for change is to make the Parliament more family-friendly and revise maternity leaves for members.
The Labour party legislator said that the system did work for anyone who was not a man and she said that having no maternity cover and employment rights was a bad situation for democracy.
The Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle said on Wednesday that a review of the current rules on not bringing babies to the Parliament has been ordered. He also said that rules should change with the changing times.
Creasy’s tweet has also sparked a debate around access to child care facilities, especially for working mothers and politicians.
MP Alex Davies-Jones tweeted that she was also breastfeeding when she was elected for the first time and was assured by Hoyle that she could breastfeed in the chamber of Westminster Hall:
When I was first elected I was still exclusively breastfeeding my child.
I met with @CommonsSpeaker to discuss this and was assured that if the need arose I would be able to feed my child in the chamber or Westminster Hall.
This rule is now a complete contradiction https://t.co/xJWK6BHQoI
— Alex Davies-Jones MP (@AlexDaviesJones) November 23, 2021
Co-leader of the Green Party, Caroline Lucas, also tweeted in solidarity, writing that the rules were absolutely absurd and had to be challenged.
Solidarity Stella - this absurd ruling absolutely needs to be challenged - besides, babies far less disruptive than many braying backbenchers … https://t.co/tWPSwFX3qg
— Caroline Lucas (@CarolineLucas) November 24, 2021
Columnist and writer Hannah Fearn also extended her support saying that women should no longer tolerate the silencing of motherhood.
"You should not take your seat when accompanied by a child". The specific wording says it all. Well women won't tolerate this silencing of motherhood anymore. Thanks for battling on against all this absolute bull, @stellacreasy https://t.co/RI3iVvASOA
— Hannah Fearn (@hannahfearn) November 24, 2021
Here are some other tweets that expressed solidarity:
Several users applauded Creasy for her stance and said they supported her.
Astonished at some of the @BBCWomansHour responses to @stellacreasy bringing her baby to work. Such a lot of “I wasn’t allowed, so why should she?” If we all thought like that change would never come.
— Stella Duffy (@stellduffy) November 24, 2021
Many users were angry that rules still forced women to choose between family life and career:
Why can’t @stellacreasy bring her baby to Parliament? They roll out ‘Women to Win’ but then reinforce that women must choose between motherhood and having a career
IT’S 2021 and women are STILL excluded from the workplace based on the biological fact they carry and feed children
— Alex Phillips (@ThatAlexWoman) November 24, 2021
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from Social media uproar after UK MP asked not to bring baby to House of Commons
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