Steve Peers
Yesterday, Nigel Farage, the
leader of the UK Independence Party (UKIP) stated that while he had no
personal objection to women breastfeeding in public, it should be for
businesses to decide on their own rules. Perhaps they could ask breastfeeding
women to “sit in a corner”. In any event, it shouldn’t be hard to breastfeed a
baby in a way that wasn’t “openly ostentatious”.
He was referring to a case in
which a restaurant asked a woman to place a napkin over her baby. Another café has
recently suggested that women should breastfeed in the disabled toilets.
There’s an interesting legal
dimension to this issue. First of all, is it legal to discriminate against breastfeeding
women? Secondly, to what extent is it illegal even to encourage such discrimination,
or at least to condone it? The latter is a fair description of Farage’s
comments.
Discrimination against breastfeeding women
As some press articles have
pointed out, the Equality Act 2010
makes it illegal in the UK to discriminate against breastfeeding women in
employment or public places like restaurants, subject to very limited
exceptions. There’s an excellent summary of the law here, on the
Maternity Action website. So businesses can’t make up their own rules on this
issue, as Farage seemed to assume – although perhaps his point was that the law
ought to change.
What about EU law? There are separate
Directives concerning sex discrimination in employment, and sex discrimination
as regards goods and services offered to the public, which would apply
to restaurants. Neither of them explicitly bans discrimination as regards
breastfeeding. But the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) has long
ruled that discrimination against pregnant women is discrimination on grounds
of sex. Its reasoning is that even though not all women are, have been, or will
become pregnant, only women can be pregnant,
and so discrimination on grounds of pregnancy is therefore direct sex
discrimination. Logically this reasoning applies by analogy to breastfeeding:
even though not all women will become mothers, or breastfeed if they do, only women can breastfeed.
If this is correct, there’s a ban
on discrimination against breastfeeding mothers right across the EU, and the UK’s
law simply reflects its EU obligations. Of course, leaving the EU (UKIP’s key
policy) would mean that the UK no longer had such obligations.
Endorsing or condoning discrimination
Of course, Nigel Farage didn’t
himself insist that a breastfeeding mother had to cover herself with a napkin
in a restaurant, or actually make a new mum sit in the corner. He merely said
that he could accept it if businesses chose to do this – even though (which he didn’t
mention) this would be illegal.
There’s an interesting line of
case law of the CJEU on the circumstances in which publicly supporting discrimination
gives rise to legal liability. First of all, in AGM COS.MET, a Finnish government official disparaged the
safety of Italian lifts. Sales of the lifts promptly plummeted (as it were),
and the manufacturer sued the Finnish government for damages. The CJEU ruled
that the State would be liable for its official’s comments if, on the facts of
the case, those comments were attributable to the State. One factor to consider
was whether the State distanced itself from those comments. On this point, it’s
interesting to note that David Cameron’s office immediately denounced Farage’s
remarks yesterday. This is probably not an attempt to reduce the government’s
legal liability, but rather a bid to hoover up the female votes that Farage apparently
doesn’t really want that much. But the effect is the same.
So can there be liability for discriminatory
comments by private individuals? In Feryn,
the CJEU said that a business could be liable for stating publicly that it
would not hire ethnic minorities, due to objections by its customers. That’s
broadly similar to Farage’s point that other restaurant customers might be ‘embarrassed’
by ‘ostentatious’ breastfeeding. Perhaps it would distract their attention too
much from gazing at Page 3 of The Sun.
Later on, in the Associatie Accept case, the CJEU ruled
that a homophobic rant by the part-owner of a football club could give rise to
liability for that club, if there was a perception that he had a significant influence on that club's
policies. While Nigel Farage
certainly seems to influence government policy generally, in this particular case David Cameron’s response to Farage's comments yesterday would rule that out.
So as things stand, Nigel Farage’s
comments would not give rise to personal or state liability – although lawsuits
against the restaurants that discriminate against breastfeeding women would be
a different matter. And things would also surely change if Farage were the Deputy
Prime Minister – although in that case, the UK’s EU membership and the Equality Act would likely not last very
long in any event.
Cartoon: Los Angeles Times
Cartoon: Los Angeles Times
Barnard & Peers: chapter 20
Interesting. I wonder if Jeremy Clarkson's opinion equivilating breastfeeding to urination, in th Sun, falls under this category?
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete