Labour, Greens women say stories shared as rebuke to PM
• The headline on this article has been the subject of complaint to Press Council. Read adjudication in full at the end of the article.
Women MPs have revealed their history of sexual abuse in public for the first time to tell Prime Minister John Key that they were personally offended by his comments about rapists.
In a chaotic day in Parliament, MPs on the Opposition side revolted after Speaker David Carter ruled that Mr Key did not need to apologise for his remarks.
The Prime Minister remained defiant, pointing to newly released offence statistics to back his accusation that the Labour Party was supporting rapists, murderers and other criminals on Christmas Island detention centre.
She had previously only told a handful of family members of her sexual assault.
Green Party co-leader Metiria Turei unsuccessfully sought an apology from Mr Key, saying that as a victim of an assault she was offended by his comments.
Some of the MPs who have walked out of Parliament over Key's disgraceful comments & the Speaker's ruling pic.twitter.com/6ze6b0G75R
She later said she was once assaulted by a stranger in the back of a taxi.
She did not report the attack to police because she thought no one would believe her, she said.
Mrs Turei said she had chosen to disclose her assault because Mr Key had trivialised rape for political gain.
"There's a point at which you have to disclose some details to genuinely represent the people who sent us here," she said.
Green Party social affairs spokeswoman Jan Logie revealed that she was sexually assaulted on a date when she was at university. She did not press charges, saying it was still a challenge for society "to feel as if we've got a right to do that".
Another Green Party MP, Catherine Delahunty, revealed that she was abused by an older man when she was 15. By the time she built up the confidence to take action, her abuser had died.
The MPs said their treatment in Parliament yesterday - being cut off by the Speaker, thrown out or dismissed - reflected the treatment of abuse victims in New Zealand.
Mr Key was later questioned about his record on sexual violence in the House. He chose to avoid the question, saying he was disappointed that Opposition MPs kept standing up for serious criminals and not victims on the Christmas Island issue.
ADJUDICATION BY THE NEW ZEALAND PRESS COUNCIL ON THE COMPLAINT OF LIZ CLAYTON AGAINST NEW ZEALAND HERALD
FINDING: UPHELD
TO BE PUBLISHED ON 21 DECEMBER 2015
[1] Ms Clayton complains about the headline to a New Zealand Herald online article dated 18 November 2015. The headline and the article related to a contretemps that occurred in Parliament when a number of women MPs for the first time revealed a history of sexual abuse against them, and said they were personally offended by the Prime Minister's comments about rapists. Ms Clayton complains that the headline breaches Principle 6.
Background [2] The article arose from the Parliamentary debate surrounding the policy of the Australian Government to deport New Zealanders, who were not Australian citizens despite having lived in Australia for some time, if they committed criminal offending. Prior to deportation, a number were held in custody. Of this group those detained at the Christmas Island detention centre attracted the most debate.
[3] The opposition parties were critical of the Government, and the Prime Minister, for their failure to support these New Zealanders. The Prime Minister's response in Parliament was to point to "newly released offence statistics" to back an accusation he made that the Labour Party was supporting rapists, murderers and other criminals from the Christmas Island detention centre.
[4] The following day the Speaker ruled that the Prime Minister did not need to apologise for his remarks. He started by reviewing the events of the day before. Said he had not heard the Prime Minister's remarks but had he done so he would have ruled them unparliamentary, required their withdrawal and an apology. However, he said the delay meant he could no longer address the matter. This prompted a mass protest by women MPs in the Labour and Green parties, four of whom revealed they had personally been abused. (Members Poto Williams, Metria Turei, Jan Logie and Catherine Delahunty).This was the first time that they had made public such information.
[5] Hansard for 11 November last reveals that the Speaker heard the two women MPs (Mmes Turei and Logie) and explained his ruling again. He interrupted the next three (Mmes Williams, Delahunty and Mahuta) and told them to sit down when they started a similar line of questioning. He warned other MPs that if anyone started a point of order with the same words, they would be asked to leave the house. Mmes Davidson, Curran and Woods did so, and were told to leave the house. Two of these (Mmes Davidson and Curran appeared to be on the point of making a similar revelation to the other four but we cannot be sure because it was not completed).
[6] On one view of the matter the exchanges on this day were related to the points of order raised, the Speakers early ruling and not the sexual abuse. However, for present purposes we are prepared to accept that the MP's involved were effectively "cut off".
[7] The headline to this report reads: "Silenced and ejected from Parliament: The female MPs who revealed they had been victims of sexual violence".
The Complaint [8] The complaint received by the Press Council alleges the article's headline was misleading and factually incorrect. Ms Clayton did not enlarge on that, but rather referred to email correspondence between her and the New Zealand Herald. However, it is clear the complaint is only against the headline. In the emails to the responsible person at the Herald, Ms Clayton complains that the entire article suggested that female MPs were silenced and ejected because they told their abuse stories, and this was factually incorrect. She states many chose to walk out, many were called to order for ignoring the speaker, and some were ejected for ignoring house rules. They were not ejected because they told stories of abuse.
[9] Ms Clayton also complains that because of the Herald article, the matter was picked up by overseas news organisations, and she referred us to a number of headlines from various overseas news organisations. She states those resulting stories were from the first, inaccurate, New Zealand Herald report. She provided no evidence to show that these headlines appeared as a consequence of what was published by the Herald.
The Herald Response [10] Ms Clayton emailed further, saying that the Herald accepted the headlines were "very misleading". The editor responded that he did not acknowledge that the headlines were misleading, but said the synopsis that ran on the home page (which Ms Clayton had supplied as a screenshot in the initial complaint) was technically incorrect, but pointed out the ejections were a direct result of MPs raising their personal stories.
Decision [11] Principle 6 reads: 6. Headlines and Captions Headlines, sub-headings, and captions should accurately and fairly convey the substance or a key element of the report they are designed to cover.
[12] We are concerned only with the headline. The story records that a number of female MPs, for the first time, publicly acknowledged that they had suffered sexual abuse. They were Mms Turei, Logie, Delahunty and Williams. The story revealed the comments by those MPs briefly outlining the abuse they had suffered. The story states that the Labour MP, Ms Williams, was thrown out of the debating chamber, which by reference to Hansard is incorrect. The MPs asked to leave were not amongst those who revealed the abuse, although they were involved in various points or order in an attempt to have the Prime Minister apologise.
[13] The difficulty is that the complainant refers to one headline in her complaint to us but supplies two.
[14] The first headline reads: "Silenced and ejected: The female MPs who revealed they had been victims of sexual violence". Even allowing for the colon the reasonable reader would take the headline to mean that those who revealed they had been victims of sexual violence were silenced and ejected by the Speaker. It is true that the four of the female MPs interrupted by the Speaker where those who revealed sexual abuse. We think it not unreasonable to say such interruption could be said to have silenced those MPs. But the headline clearly implies that the MPs who complained of sexual abuse were ejected. On the Hansard record that is not correct. As such the headline is inaccurate.. This inaccuracy no doubt led to the editor's comment that the homepage synopsis was inaccurate. If this headline were the subject of the complaint we would have upheld the complaint.
[15] The headline complained of is in fact a caption under a photograph that reads "The MPs who stood up to their abusers...but were then silenced and ejected from Parliament". There is a necessary link between the revealing of abuse, the silencing and ejection. It can be seen the second part of the headline contains some elements of the previous headline. However, in our view the headline remains inaccurate for the same reasons. As we have noted at [12] the MPs who revealed sexual abuse could be said to have been silenced but, critically, not one of those four MPs were ejected. The speaker ejected Mms Wood, Davidson and Curran who did not reveal any abuse. (Although as we have noted it is possible Mmes Curran and Davidson may have been about to do so). As well, as the complainant states, some of the MPs elected to walk out and the Speaker ejected the three above for breach of his ruling. If they had been among the abused MPs we may well have considered this matter differently. A basic check of the facts would have revealed the inaccuracy.