Ardern signals conversion therapy ban this year
WAITANGI: Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has put a rough timeline on her Government’s promise to end conversion therapy, saying she wants legislation before the House this year.
But there is no detailed timeline beyond that, at this stage.
Ms Ardern told media at Waitangi yesterday morning that the Government had committed to reform in this area ‘‘but we want to get it right’’.
‘‘If we don’t draft this in the right place; if we don’t get the law right we won’t have the positive impact we need to have.’’
Conversion therapy is based on a belief that people with diverse sexual orientations or gender identities are abnormal and should be changed so they fit within heteronormative standards.
She also strongly pushed back on senior National Party MP Simon Bridges’ suggestions that banning conversion therapy was an attack on free speech.
‘‘I personally do have a wider concern,’’ he said of the policy on the AM Show this morning.
‘‘That is freedom of speech. That is in a liberal society, in a tolerant society, we have been very tolerant of different views.’’
National Party leader Judith Collins has said it did not have a position on the subject of conversion therapy.
Ms Ardern yesterday said the banning of such a practice was ‘‘absolutely not’’ an attack on free speech.
‘‘We know that conversion therapy has a harmful impact on our rainbow community.
‘‘We know that we have higher rates of selfharm and suicide in that community. So I consider that we have an obligation to fix this issue and reduce harm.’’
Ms Ardern said the Government was already working on the policy at the moment.
‘‘We have committed to doing it.
‘‘We’re working on the policy now. We will be going out and consulting with communities who are deeply affected by this over the coming months.
‘‘But I want to see that legislation in the House this year.’’
Earlier, the Green Party’s rainbow communities spokeswoman Elizabeth Kerekere criticised the Government for ‘‘dragging’’ on banning the practice.
She said places such as the Australian state of Victoria already had a ban in place.
‘‘We should be a leader. We’ll be pushing the Government on this.’’
Labour campaigned on banning conversion therapy in last year’s election.
‘‘We will pass a law to ban the harmful practice of conversion therapy. Conversion therapy is based on the misguided idea that people are wrong or broken because of their sexual orientation or gender identity,’’ Rainbow spokesman Tamati Coffey said at the time. This is fundamentally wrong.’’
Yesterday was the first time Ms Ardern put a timeline on the legislation itself. — The New Zealand Herald