Reality TV And Soap Stars Should Breastfeed To 'Encourage Working Class Mothers To Do The Same', Says MP

MP Urges TOWIE Stars To Breastfeed To 'Encourage Working Class Mothers To Do The Same'

An MP has said soap actresses, celebrities and reality TV stars should feed their children "naturally" to get working-class mothers give up bottle feeding.

Labour MP Sharon Hodgson urged celebrity mothers on shows such as The Only Way Is Essex and Coronation Street to breastfeed publicly to help "reverse the middle class image" of breastfeeding.

Speaking during a Westminster Hall debate, the shadow minister for children and families said:

"In some communities today, there seems to be an anti-breastfeeding culture among young mothers, which we need to challenge and reverse.

"Come on, TV producers, soap writers, celebrities and TOWIE stars watching this debate - get to it. Get breastfeeding on TV and get working class mums seeing it."

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Hodgson said breastfeeding needed to be seen as "normal and natural" and that it was crucial for new mothers to feel "utterly comfortable" doing it.

"Role models must come forward to extol the virtues of breastfeeding and we need more mums on TV - honourable members may laugh," she said.

'We need mums in our soaps and even on The Only Way is Essex, breastfeeding naturally and happily to encourage mums to do the same."

The MP for Washington & Sunderland West Constituency said we need to let new mums and young mums know that "breastfeeding is not only good for their health and that of their babies, but it has immediate benefits, such as helping them lose their pregnancy weight much faster".

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At the end of the debate, the Labour MP added: "I want mums to feel comfortable in public - even in Claridge's, for goodness' sake.

"We need to show that it is totally normal, natural and acceptable, and that those who have a problem with it simply need to get over it."

Rachel Burrows, from the UK’s parenting site Netmums told HuffPost UK Parents: "While breastfeeding rates maybe higher among older, middle class mums, it’s wrong and rather condescending to assume young or working class mothers don’t do it.

"However, encouraging more popular TV programmes to show breastfeeding and make it seen as the normal way to feed your baby would be very positive.

"Soaps and reality shows have a big social impact and reach many young mothers, so they are a great place to start."

Rosemary Dodds, Senior Policy Adviser, NCT felt that all mums should be supported, whether they breastfeed or not.

She told HuffPost UK Parents: "The NCT supports all mums whether they breastfeed, bottle-feed or do some of both - it’s up to parents to decide how they would like to feed their baby.

"We welcome new ways of giving parents accurate information about feeding their baby, enabling them to make informed decisions."

Breastfeeding Photos
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Ashlee Wells Jacksons' "4th Trimester Bodies Project" embraces the changes brought to women’s bodies by motherhood. Above, is a photo of herself and her baby.

Says Jackson: "I see beautiful, inspiring, real women on a daily basis who struggle with their body image because they don’t feel they measure up with who the media tells them to be... So much more needs to be done in our society to embrace body positivity and normalize breastfeeding."
(credit:Ashlee Wells Jackson )
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In the September 2014 issue of Glamour magazine, actress Olivia Wilde said: "Breastfeeding is the most natural thing. I don’t know, now it feels like Otis should always be on my breast."
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Photographer Jade Beall takes portraits, like this one, that celebrate moms' bodies for her project, "A Beautiful Body."
via A Beautiful Body Book Project
(credit:Jade Beall)
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In 2012, singer P!nk shared this gorgeous photo of herself nursing baby Willow Sage on Instagram and Twitter. (credit:Pink/Instagram)
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In 2014, singer Gwen Stefani posted a beautiful Instagram photo of herself feeding her son Apollo in Switzerland. (credit:Gwen Stefani/Instagram)
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Russian model Natalia Vodianova debuted her son Maxim to the world with this stunning breastfeeding photo in June 2014. (credit:Natalia Vodianova/Instagram)
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This photo is from Vanessa Simmons' Normalize Breastfeeding campaign. Says Simmons: "If [women] read other stories, then it becomes more normal like, 'Oh, I'm going through that exact same thing.' Or, 'My baby's screaming their head off at six weeks and I can't figure out why,'... Sharing those stories enables women to be able to connect." Read more about Normalize Breastfeeding here.
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This photo is from Leilani Rogers' Public Breastfeeding Awareness Project. Read more about it here.
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This image is also from Leilani Rogers' Public Breastfeeding Awareness Project. Read more about it here.
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This picture is from HuffPost blogger Jillayna Adamson' "Breastfeeding is Beautiful" series. See more images, and read about it here.
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HuffPost blogger Jamie Davis Smith wrote about her difficulty breastfeeding her first child, and what the experience was like. Read her blog post here.
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In a blog post where this image was featured, author Mama Bean writes, "We are continually sold The Ideal; the picture-perfect, fully-clothed, fully made-up portrait of Motherhood... And yet in the real world, motherhood takes a far more literal shape; a far more physical form. It may well be slim, trim and toned... just as it may be rounded, softened and stretched. And yet, this second and more common reality is hidden and censored by default, as if motherhood is somehow something to shelter from."

Read the full post here.
(credit:Paulina Splechta Photography)