On Thursday, Diane Abbott is to deliver a major speech on the importance of family life to the well-being of men as well as the importance of men to family life.
This is naturally a left-wing cause, and
specifically an anti-Thatcherite one. Only a generation ago, a single manual
wage provided the wage-earner, his wife and their several children with a
quality of life unimaginable even on two professional salaries today.
This impoverishment has been so rapid and so
extreme that most people, including almost all politicians and commentators,
simply refuse to acknowledge that it has happened. But it has indeed happened.
And it is still going on.
If fathers matter, then they must face up to
their responsibilities, with every assistance, including censure where
necessary, from the wider society, including when it acts politically as the
State.
A legal presumption of equal parenting.
Restoration of the tax allowance for fathers for so long as Child Benefit is
being paid to mothers. Restoration of the requirement that providers of
fertility treatment take account of the child’s need for a father. (There is no
point saying that Labour abolished the second and third of those. The point now
is that the Tories are doing nothing to put them back in place.)
For repeal of the ludicrous provision for two
women to be listed as a child’s parents on a birth certificate, although even
that is excelled by the provision for two men to be so listed. (There is no
point saying that Labour introduced, etc.)
And for paternity leave to be made available at
any time until the child was 18 or left school, thereby reasserting paternal
authority, and thus requiring paternal responsibility, at key points in
childhood and adolescence. Of course a new baby needs her mother. But a 15-year-old
might very well need her father, and that bit of paternity leave that he has
been owed these last 15 years.
That authority and responsibility require an
economic basis such as only the State can ever guarantee, and such as only the
State can very often deliver. And that basis is high-wage, high-skilled,
high-status employment. All aspects of public policy must take account of this
urgent social and cultural need.
Not least, that includes energy policy: the
energy sources to be preferred by the State are those providing the high-wage,
high-skilled, high-status jobs that secure the economic basis of paternal
authority in the family and in the wider community. So, nuclear power. And
coal, not dole.
Moreover, paternal authority cannot be affirmed
while fathers are torn away from their children and harvested in wars.
Especially, though not exclusively, since those sent to war tend to come from
working-class backgrounds, where starting to have children often still happens
earlier than has lately become the norm. Think of those very young men whom we
see going off or coming home, hugging and kissing their tiny children.
You can believe in fatherhood, or you can support
wars under certainly most and possibly all circumstances, the latter especially
in practice today even if not necessarily in the past or in principle. You
cannot do both.
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