Fellowship Dinners Australia
On 15 February 2026 surrounded by her loving family, Margaret Tighe Australia's best known pro-life advocate passed from this world. Margaret became ill in late 2025, typically as she was going out the door to yet another Right to Life Australia meeting. Having led the Australian pro- life movement for over 60 years, it is likely we shall not see the likes of her again. I have always thought of her as a prophet without renown in her own country.
Not everyone today would know that Margaret started her pro-life activism in the 1960's before the first abortion legislation was ever introduced into an Australian parliament. She watched the passage of the United Kingdom Abortion Act of 1967 with a sense of foreboding for Australia and was a founding member of the Caroline Chisholm Pregnancy Support Service in the nineteen sixties in anticipation of what would likely follow here. With the introduction of abortion legislation into Australia's federal parliament in May 1973, she realised pregnancy support services were not going to be enough to prevent the legalised killing of Australia's unborn children and joined in the fledgling Right to Life Victoria campaign against the bill scheduled for debate in May 1973. These were frenetic days...days when Margaret began addressing public meetings across Victoria. My first recollection of Margaret then, was another pro-life activist saying to me, "You should see her library of information and material on abortion, Denise!" It should be remembered that at this time she had a very young family of three and later, with the birth of a daughter, of four, the baby Elizabeth accompanying her to interstate conferences where I remember her being fondly nursed by eager babysitters.
When the dust had settled after the 1973 campaign, and remember the abortion legislation had been defeated 98 votes to 23, having served as Vice President of Right to Life Victoria to a busy Obstetrician / Gynaecologist, Margaret became President in 1974. The aims and objectives of the association were to be achieved by education, political action and social action upon which three committees were established, the latter ultimately resulting in the establishment of the currently existing national Pregnancy Help Line. Right to Life Victoria was to become Right to Life Australia with Margaret increasingly criss-crossing Australia to lobby at and sit in State and Federal legislatures whenever abortion or euthanasia was debated. I have a vivid memory of sitting wearily on my bedside in the early morning in the latter years of my working life and thinking, "Margaret will be at the airport now !" on her way to wherever there was legislation affecting the sanctity of life being debated. It was always comforting to know that there in the gallery, sometimes alone , sometimes in the dark late at night, "someone"... Margaret... kept watch, as if in solidarity, as the right to life was taken away from those unable to defend themselves.
Desiring as she so deeply did, for everyone to have a chance at life, Margaret shared her enjoyment with many others. Her hospitality and entertaining I always thought was legendary! In 1978 an entire busload of overseas attendees at an International Family Conference in Melbourne was offloaded at her home in Essendon to enjoy her and husband Ron's warm hospitality. Margaret as a lover of life, loved a party, music and entertainment! The entire Tighe family here deserves the Australian pro-life movement's acknowledgement for their unselfish cooperation and sharing of their mother's time in her noble pursuit. It's now up to us all to ensure her efforts are not wasted, to boldly accept the baton she has handed on to us. I am confident this will happen. So much of today's pro-life activism is a direct result of her example, inspiration and urging. May she now rest in peace with those she loved and so nobly defended in this life.
Denise M. Cameron...Editor
Pro-Life News - Summer 2026 - Editorial
Re-Printed with the Permission of the Pro-Life News Editor Denise Cameron
LEARN MOREThe inherent dangers of the state of Victoria expanding its euthanasia laws are highlighted in this article by Dr. David Bennett.
Our most carefree times of our lives are as babies, toddlers and young children because our needs are taken care of by those on whom we are dependent. The art therefore of growing up is to wean ourselves off this dependence on others as we mature. How successful we are in achieving this can often determine the overall effectiveness of our lives. However, as people age, they potentially enter a cycle- or a recycle of dependence- due to the onset of physical decline and/or associated ill-health. The factors which can affect our capacity to adapt to ageing or the onset of ill-health, can be fundamentally influenced by the ethical ethos which guides public health policy.
As a social democratic organisation, Social Action Australia (SAA) is therefore gravely concerned about recent moves in late 2025 by the government in the southeastern Australian state of Victoria to expand its existing euthanasia laws because these could adversely affect those who are now becoming dependent on health care professionals as they age and/or become sick. Before detailing these proposed legal changes to euthanasia, it is first essential to overview the strategic context in which the Victorian government is operating.
Because euthanasia undermines the fundamental operating ethical principle that medical practioners do no harm, the approach of Victoria’s dominant Socialist Left (SL) faction within the state’s ruling Australian Labor Party (ALP) has been to introduce euthanasia by degrees. This strategic approach has been one where public assurances have been made by SL politicians that euthanasia (and assisted suicide) will occur in only exceptional circumstances where the patient is terminally ill.
Therefore, when Victoria’s Voluntary Assisted Dying Act 2017 (the 2017 Act), which took effect in June 2019, was introduced, SL politicians re-assured the public that euthanasia or assisted suicide would only apply to the terminally.
Having ‘got away’ with commencing this paradigm shift in public policy where treating health care workers (i.e. medical doctors and nurses) could kill their patients or ‘assist’ them to suicide, Victorian SL politicians are now looking to expand the availability of euthanasia in the state. This is despite previous public assurances in 2017 by SL state politicians that such changes would not occur.
The proposed 2025 Victorian euthanasia laws would increase the life expectancy period to twelve months for terminally ill patients and remove the so-called ‘gag rule’ so that medical doctors can discuss with their patients the possibility of death being administered to them. These mooted changes even go so far as to require medical doctors who have a conscientious objection, to canvas the option of having euthanasia.
The SL’s Incremental Approach to Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide
The overall effect of these proposed legal changes is to subtly but definitely shift Victoria’s health law regime away from preserving life to terminating life. It is not surprising that Victoria is leading the way in Australia to expand euthanasia laws. This is because university academics in that state have been at the forefront over the years in advocating a transition away from the health law paradigm that no harm be done, primum non nocere.
The strategy that therefore is being applied by Victoria’s SL is to again re-assure the public, as was first done in 2017, that the 2025 proposed changes to euthanasia law will be of a limited nature so that the public will be re-assured that they are not threatened. However, given that the 2025 legislative amendments consequently constitute a breach of faith on the SL’s part, only the most naïve can now believe that these ‘reforms’ will not provide a future basis for euthanasia to be further expanded down the track.
The SL’s sophistry regarding the expansion of Victorian Euthanasia law is also reflected by the utilisation of rhetoric such as ‘compassionate’ and ‘dignity’ to categorise these proposed legislative changes. Such terminology conveys the impression that the interests of the patient will be preserved. The success of this political strategy by the SL is therefore predicated upon the public believing that the proposed legislative changes are standalone reforms.
However, the dilution and eventual future removal of legislative safeguards with regard to euthanasia, shift the power from the patient to the health care professional. This is because the current law endows the patient with protective rights which apply to patients regardless of their socio-economic status. This creeping transition away from the health care paradigm that practioners seek to preserve life will also mean that those who are not as well off will be threatened.
Moving Away from the Palliative Care Paradigm
This will be because those who lack the capacity to afford private health care cover or first-class aged care could well be threatened if euthanasia laws in Victoria and Australia continues to expand to the extent that practioners will one day have the ‘right’ (sic) to terminate a life on the basis they believe it is appropriate to do so.
It will also be socially unjust that only those with the financial means in the future will be able to access palliative care. This form of care is provided to people with serious illnesses, which are often terminal, so as to ease their suffering and/or prolong their lives, if the patient so decides.
The question therefore emerges as to why there is such a concerted push in Victoria to introduce euthanasia and assisted suicide? The answer to this question is two-fold. Firstly, as previously analysed in this article, Victoria has been the state in Australia where there has been a concerted push by humanities academics to move toward a pro-death culture concerning medical practice and the law.
Secondly, and paradoxically, due to major scientific improvements in health care, people are now living longer so that they are becoming a financial and a resource ‘burden’ . This is particularly the case in Victoria where due to the state’s perilous financial situation, the SL dominated state government is now looking to reduce the resource strain of providing care to the sick and the elderly by eventually transitioning toward open-slather euthanasia and assisted dying medical regime.
Even those who are financially better-off are threatened by this creeping paradigm shift in Victoria away from palliative care if legal protections are further diluted in the future. Consequently, medical practioners practicing in private hospitals or in expensive high care nursing homes, could be subject to external pressure from interested parties (such as relatives) to engineer the application of euthanasia.
The Political Tuberculosis
It is therefore with regret given the scope for these above cited scenarios to become realities, that due to the SL’s dominance the lower house of the Victorian Parliament, that the state government’s proposed expansionary changes to euthanasia laws could pass by the end of 2025. The only hope for the potential future victims of euthanasia in Victoria is for members of that state’s upper house of parliament to vote down these proposed reforms on the basis that they realize that they themselves could one day well be victims of the transition away from the palliative care paradigm.
Consequently, it is apt that the wisdom of the great Renaissance Florentine philosopher Nicola Machievelli (1469 to 1527) be cited at this juncture. Machiavelli observed that political problems are akin to Tuberculosis, easy to cure in the early stages but near impossible in the late stages. Similarly, the Victorian public will eventually discover that unless they awaken to the SL’s agenda of eventually introducing open slather euthanasia, they will regardless of their background all eventually be threatened, because as in the words of a now former Victorian premier, they have passed their ‘use by date’.
LEARN MOREThe following is a letter which Denise Cameron, the President of Pro-Life Victoria, wrote to the press before a bill was unfortunately passed by the Victorian Parliament outlawing protests outside the state’s abortion clinics.
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