Other than a very short one by another man and one by me, these are the comments under this. In view of the site, their authors, other than the last one, will certainly be Labour voters and almost certainly active members of the Labour Party:
Marie
Actually what the women we
talk to want is for care-giving to be recognised rather than encouraging women
to replace unpaid care work with paid care which they don't all want.
Socio-economic systems (and the language of policy) can value and reward invisible
care-giving in all sorts of ways - for example by having a more family friendly
taxation system, or through protection for child benefit, or schemes like
citizen's income.
Also some countries offer home-care allowances.
Talking
respectfully about the importance of caregiving and about the contribution of
caregivers would also be welcome since giving or receiving care is part of the
human condition.
We don't want our primary school children to do long days away
from home - we believe that the school day is long enough.
We don't want young
babies to have to go into baby rooms and childcare settings, at least not for
long hours, and preferably not unless all other avenues are explored to try and
avoid separation between mother and baby or father and baby.
Yes we agree we
need better hourly rates of pay for everyone, including our young people. But
we also need affordable housing and more social housing to protect the welfare
net.
Yes we agree to scrapping the bedroom tax.
The trouble with Labour (and
others) is that they only want to hear the voices of some women - not all.
Many
women value the time they are able to give to caregiving.
We think caring for
family is important and the only thing which makes us feel less equal is the
attitude of policymakers who devalue care.
Kerry
Kerry
Every time that Labour or
any other politicians talk about family friendly policy they only ever focus on
childcare. What about families that want to have a parent at home to raise
their children?
It is also childcare but families with a stay at home parent are completely overlooked by politicians & erased from debates about childcare.
We are unfairly discriminated against in the tax & benefit system & patronised & ignored by politicians.
I would like to see families like mine recognised & supported.
It is also childcare but families with a stay at home parent are completely overlooked by politicians & erased from debates about childcare.
We are unfairly discriminated against in the tax & benefit system & patronised & ignored by politicians.
I would like to see families like mine recognised & supported.
Sarah
The Feminist movement was about giving women choice and freedom; forcing women to leave small children to return to the workplace simply to make ends meet and facilititating it with wraparound childcare is not progress.
The Feminist movement was about giving women choice and freedom; forcing women to leave small children to return to the workplace simply to make ends meet and facilititating it with wraparound childcare is not progress.
I dare you to ask your constituents - would you like us
to enable you as a family to have one parent at home raising your children?
And I dare you to consider your
policies with Article 3 (1) of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in
front of you, and answer honestly whether the drive to push ever younger
children in to longer and longer hours of childcare is truly in the best interests
of the child.
Hannah
As a stay-at-home mum I would love to see my interests represented by any of the main parties.
As a stay-at-home mum I would love to see my interests represented by any of the main parties.
My
husband and I have made considerable sacrifices to our quality of living in
order to provide our children with what we see as the best start in life - the
security and comfort of having mummy at home.
My children are now four and six,
and confident, secure, and already well educated.
We expect to raise useful,
reliable members of society. In return the government taxes us harder than
families where both parents work,
It would be good to have a tax system that
took the family as a unit (rather than treating it as having two incomes) and
also recognised the number of dependants within a household.
I would like my position as a full-time-mother to be respected.
I intend to
raise my children to believe that relationships are what give their lives
meaning and value, not a pay-packet, and it would be nice to find a political
representative who valued family over the economy.
If mothers of small children
need to work (given the tax burden levied against families it is hardly
surprising when they do), it would be nice to see the government supporting a
wider range of child-care choices.
It has been demonstrated by numerous social
and psychological studies that nursery is far from an ideal environment for
under-threes - a child minder or an au pair for example, offer a small child
the intimacy and consistency of care that they need for healthy development.
We
forget that as well as physical and educational care, a child's emotional
development is just as important.
I would love to see politicians taking up the
needs of the voiceless in our society (children) and representing these in
parliament.
Imogen
Labour, like all the parties, is driving down a one way street called Childcare with no regard to the value of care provided by parents themselves.
Until you ask why are extra
hours desperately needed to be worked (to pay for housing, food bills and
school shoes) you ignore the real reason many women (and their families) need
help with childcare.
Support families to choose their own 'best' option.
Look
to America which has several ways of recognising households within tax and let
families decide.
Until mothers and fathers providing love and care 'at home'
are recognised and supported, Labour does not have my vote.
Professions of loyalty to Harriet Harman by more than credible alternative candidates for the Labour Deputy Leadership need to be seen in this light.
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