So how do Whanganui electorate candidates intend to vote in the referendum, with only five weeks until early voting starts?
Whanganui MP and shadow attorney general Harete Hipango seems to have been lying low, after National Party leader Judith Collins spent much of the previous week defending her in the media for an intemperate and shockingly misleading social media post on the March abortion legislation.
Collins seems to have given her a pass because "she's a very strong Catholic", so it's no surprise that she wants to deny the rest of us assistance to end our terminal suffering and voted No at the bill's final reading.
Meanwhile, Greens candidate Alan Clay is strongly in favour but Labour's Steph Lewis hasn't made up her mind. Māori Labour MP Adrian Rurawhe is a No, as is New Conservative candidate Jonathan Marshall, who lives in the New Plymouth electorate.
CAROL WEBB
Whanganui
Not silly
Re: MP's Ardern comment labelled 'silly stuff' (Chronicle, July 30):
It's not silly, and one doesn't need to be a woman or Catholic to acknowledge the fact. It is true that live children are born, and often born short of full term. If law lets life be terminated at any time short of natural birth, it's not silly to see it as killing the child.
We are shocked when we hear of death by violence, and so we should be, whether it's a child or adult or even an aged person. It is a shocking fact, and no one can change the truth by denying it.
JOHN TRIPE
Whanganui
If it quacks
Re letter (Chronicle, July 23) where Mr K A Benfell suggested President Trump could be blamed for the Tiwai Point smelter shutdown and the water shortage in Auckland.
This idea may gain traction after Trump's brilliant performance in his cognitive test. Who else could tell the difference between an "elephant and a duck"?
GRAHAM LEWIS
Whanganui