UK PM candidate Andrea sparks row with her ‘motherhood’ comments

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Reuters, London :
Andrea Leadsom, one of two candidates to be the next British prime minister, has caused an uproar by suggesting that being a mother means she has a greater stake in the country’s future than her childless rival Theresa May.
A little-known junior energy minister until she emerged as one of the most ardent voices in the campaign to leave the European Union, Leadsom is the outsider in the contest to succeed David Cameron as Conservative leader and prime minister.
Cameron, who had campaigned for Britain to stay in the bloc, announced he would quit after the June 23 referendum delivered a vote for Brexit. May, the interior minister who also advocated remaining in the EU, is the favourite to replace him.
“I am sure she will be really sad she doesn’t have children so I don’t want this to be ‘Andrea has children, Theresa hasn’t’ because I think that would be really horrible,” Leadsom told the Times newspaper, which has declared its support for May.
“But genuinely I feel being a mum means you have a very real stake in the future of our country, a tangible stake. She possibly has nieces, nephews, lots of people. But I have children who are going to have children who will directly be a part of what happens next.”
Leadsom denounced the Times article on Twitter as “gutter journalism” and “the exact opposite of what I said”.
In a statement, she said she had made clear to the Times that “nothing I said should be used in any way to suggest that Theresa May not having children had any bearing whatever on the leadership election”.
The Times stood by its story and released an audio recording of Leadsom making the comments, which was played on Saturday morning news bulletins on all the main radio and TV stations.
May made no comment on Leadsom’s interview, merely tweeting: “Yesterday, I launched my clean campaign pledge and invite @AndreaLeadsom to join me in signing it.”
That was a reference to five commitments May made on Friday, including to ensure that campaigning “stays within the acceptable limits of political debate”.
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