Australian opposition leader apologises to PM
BY Agencies25 Oct 2012 4:29 AM IST
Agencies25 Oct 2012 4:29 AM IST
Australia’s opposition leader apologized to Prime Minister Julia Gillard on Tuesday for suggesting that her government is inexperienced in family policy. Some saw the comment as a cheap shot at the prime minister, who has no children.
Tony Abbott’s apology came two weeks after Gillard, Australia’s first woman prime minister, branded him a misogynist in an extraordinary attack in a speech to Parliament.
Gillard took offense on Tuesday when Abbott attacked the government’s announcement that it was reducing the amount of public money parents receive for every newborn.
Parents are currently paid 5,000 Australian dollars for each baby. But from mid-2013, each second and subsequent baby will earn parents only AD 3,000, with government officials explaining that such families could reuse items such as cribs and strollers. Abbott argued that parents sometimes needed to buy a second crib or a larger stroller that could carry two children.
‘I think if the government was a bit more experienced in this area, they wouldn’t come out with glib lines like that,’ Abbott told Seven Network television. The incident has reminded some of a furor created five years ago by Sen Bill Heffernan, who said Gillard, now aged 51, did not deserve a leadership role because she had decided not to have children.
Tony Abbott’s apology came two weeks after Gillard, Australia’s first woman prime minister, branded him a misogynist in an extraordinary attack in a speech to Parliament.
Gillard took offense on Tuesday when Abbott attacked the government’s announcement that it was reducing the amount of public money parents receive for every newborn.
Parents are currently paid 5,000 Australian dollars for each baby. But from mid-2013, each second and subsequent baby will earn parents only AD 3,000, with government officials explaining that such families could reuse items such as cribs and strollers. Abbott argued that parents sometimes needed to buy a second crib or a larger stroller that could carry two children.
‘I think if the government was a bit more experienced in this area, they wouldn’t come out with glib lines like that,’ Abbott told Seven Network television. The incident has reminded some of a furor created five years ago by Sen Bill Heffernan, who said Gillard, now aged 51, did not deserve a leadership role because she had decided not to have children.
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