Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and others had offered their congratulations on the "wonderful news". Ardern's plans for a family had sparked a sexism row during the election when a television host quizzed her on the issue, saying voters had a right to know before they cast their ballots. She had rejected the line of questioning as "unacceptable", saying pregnancy and child rearing should not hinder women's opportunities in the workplace.
"I am not the first woman to multitask. I am not the first woman to work and have a baby," she had said. Bilawal, the current PPP chairman, said that while it was "uplifting to see the world rejoice at her [Ardern's] good fortune", it was only natural for him to look back and compare this situation with the one his "mother faced 28 years ago when she became the first world leader to give birth while in office".
Speaking of General Ziaul Haq's regime - during which Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was hanged - he said the dictator "radicalised Pakistan to such an extent that we are still haunted by his actions today". "It was in this environment that my mother cut her political teeth, and led the political campaign against the regime," said Bilawal is his article. "In 1988, my mother led a nationwide election campaign, wrote a bestselling book, had her first child and became the youngest and first female prime minister of the Muslim world. All in one year! For her detractors this wasn't good enough. She was unacceptable because she was a woman."
Recalling the time when Benazir was pregnant with his sister, Bakhtawar, Bilawal said that his mother's prime ministership was challenged for that fact alone. "There were calls for her dismissal, the setting up of a caretaker government because a pregnant woman had no right to be prime minister. It's not like the constitution allowed for maternity leave."