Disagreeing with somebody’s professional decisions is one thing. Just leave their personal choices out of it.
Australian women in the public eye are no strangers to attacks by conservative commentators, as the likes of Julia Gillard, Anna Bligh, Christine Nixon and Peta Credlin know all too well.
But today, Daily Telegraph journalist Piers Akerman reached a vile new low in his column about Human Rights Commission president Gillian Triggs – because instead of just attacking her professional judgment, he criticised the way she chose to care for her late daughter.
Her late, profoundly disabled daughter Victoria.
Victoria was born in 1984 with a chromosomal disorder called Edwards syndrome and was “as severely retarded as anyone who is still alive can be,” Triggs told a Fairfax interviewer in 2013.
The syndrome is associated with characteristics including structural heart defects, intestines protruding outside the body, breathing difficulties, kidney malformations, intellectual disability, a small head, clenched hands, an abnormally small jaw.
Most foetuses with the syndrome die before birth, but Victoria “had this inner rod of determination”, Triggs said and lived until age 21. When Victoria was six months old, Triggs and her former husband found a foster family who were better equipped to care for their daughter’s complex needs.
Victoria lived with that family until her death at age 21.
Both the decision to have their daughter live with another family and her death were no doubt, heartbreaking for both Triggs and former husband Sandy Clark.
Akerman – a climate change-denying columnist renowned for his unfounded allegations about the sexuality of Julia Gillard’s partner – had a point to make about Gillian Trigg’s professional decision making today. So he decided to use Victoria as cheap political fuel.