Nelson Mail

Parents know best over leave

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Labour has predictabl­y rejected the idea because its reform is a flagship one and it doesn’t want National getting in on the act. And this is understand­able.

National now plays the caring protector of parents while not long ago it not only rejected the idea of the extension of parental leave to 26 weeks. It even twice vetoed the move on the grounds that it was unaffordab­le.

But Labour should still adopt National’s idea, because it is a good one. The people best placed to decide what is best for them and their child are the parents themselves. It is not for any government to tell them that they are wrong.

National’s claims to be promoting ‘‘choice’’ are often merely ideology dressed up as freedom. But in this case, the choice word is meaningful and the choice really should belong to the parents.

They should be able to decide whether to share the leave and halve its length – that is, to opt for 13 weeks of shared leave together instead of 26 weeks’ leave for one parent – or any other permutatio­n. They should be able to share part of the leave, for instance, or none of it. Only a very small minority of fathers now take parental leave. Changing that would be good for everyone.

Labour is clearly tempted by this greater flexibilit­y and knows beneath the bluster that it is sensible. Otherwise it would not have accepted a separate National amendment that increases the ‘‘keeping in touch’’ hours available to one parent who wants to return to work for a few hours a week during the leave period. Anything which allows the parents to bond with the baby and with each other, while meeting their other responsibi­lities, is clearly desirable.Labour’s Iain LeesGallow­ay argues that the National amendment could lessen the time available to the primary carer (usually the mother) to bond. But it’s not for the state to play the paterfamil­ias here.

Labour has already conceded that it might adopt the sharedpare­ntal leave idea ‘‘later’’, leaving the impression that its refusal to adopt the idea is purely political.

National is trying to have its cake and eat it. Its about-turn on parental leave and its sudden ‘‘caring’’ attitude will not impress many voters. So Labour can afford politicall­y to take the longer view and also do the right thing.

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