Andrew Tettenborn

Why should MPs tell parents not to smack their kids?

Credit: iStock

Is it about to become illegal for parents to smack their child? We might have known that the already top-heavy Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill would be hijacked by those with an agenda to push. Labour MP Jess Asato has tabled an amendment, backed by 26 MPs (including surprisingly one Tory), that would abolish the legal defence of reasonable chastisement. This would criminalise all physical punishment, even within the home, as has been done in Wales and Scotland. A number of organisations have already lined up behind her, including Humanists UK and the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health (RCPCH). This amendment must be resisted.

The movement for a smacking ban is overwhelmingly comfortably middle-class

There are clear arguments of principle and policy against the ban on smacking, which would involve a massive intrusion by the state into family life. It would deprive overworked parents of what is often an effective way of keeping order.

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