Lethbridge Herald

Assisted dying bill wins approval

Most Conservati­ves vote against it

- Joan Bryden THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Over the objections of dozens of Conservati­ves, the House of Commons gave approval in principle Thursday to a bill that would make it easier for dying Canadians to get medical help to end their suffering.

Conservati­ves, including Leader Erin O’Toole, were the only MPs to vote against the bill, which passed by a vote of 246-78.

O’Toole had given his MPs the right to vote according to their conscience­s. While some Conservati­ves supported the bill Thursday, nearly two-thirds of O’Toole’s 121-person caucus did not.

The bill now moves on to the House of Commons justice committee for further scrutiny and possible amendments.

In a statement after the vote, O’Toole said he may yet support the bill if it’s amended to include “reasonable safeguards to protect the vulnerable.”

“My vote on this bill is informed by my own personal experience with my mother in palliative care and my legal examinatio­ns of safeguards to protect the vulnerable,” he said.

O’Toole added that a Conservati­ve government led by him would “not revisit the issue of the right to access assisted death.”

However, O’Toole courted social conservati­ves during his party’s recent leadership contest by vowing to protect the rights of those who refuse to perform or refer patients for services that violate their conscience­s — a move that would restrict access to assisted dying.

Last year, the Ontario Court of Appeal ruled unanimousl­y that doctors who have moral objections to providing health services like abortion or assisted death must provide patients with an “effective referral” to another doctor. The court ruled “there is compelling evidence that patients will suffer harm in the absence of an effective referral.”

During opening debate on C7, a number of Conservati­ves argued that the bill fails to protect conscience rights.

The bill would amend the law on medical assistance in dying to bring it into compliance with a Quebec court ruling last fall — a ruling many Conservati­ves have argued should have been appealed to the Supreme Court.

The ruling struck down a provision in the law that restricted access to assisted dying to those whose natural death is reasonably foreseeabl­e.

The bill would scrap reasonably foreseeabl­e death as a requiremen­t for an assisted death but would retain the concept to set out easier eligibilit­y rules for those who are near death and more stringent rules for those who aren’t.

For those deemed to be near death, the government is proposing to drop the requiremen­t that a person must wait 10 days after being approved for an assisted death before receiving the procedure. It would also reduce the number of witnesses needed to one from two.

It also proposes to drop the requiremen­t that a person must be able to give consent a second time immediatel­y before receiving the procedure.

That provision is in response to high profile cases in which people approved for an assisted death have been forced to end their lives sooner than they wanted for fear that they would lose the mental capacity to give final consent immediatel­y before receiving the procedure.

In an apparent reference to that provision, O’Toole said, “I support the use of advanced directives but within the context of a stronger set of safeguards.”

Under the bill, people whose death is not reasonably foreseeabl­e would face higher hurdles.

Such people would face a minimum 90-day period for assessment­s of their requests for an assisted death. One of the two medical practition­ers who assesses a request would have to have expertise in the person’s particular medical condition. And the person would have to be able to give final consent immediatel­y before the assisted death.

The bill would also explicitly ban assisted dying in cases where mental illness is the sole underlying medical condition.

Thursday’s vote marked the second time this week that a spotlight has been shone on O’Toole’s efforts to straddle the divide between social conservati­ves and more moderate members of his caucus.

On Wednesday, the

Commons gave approval in principle to a bill outlawing conversion therapy, a widely discredite­d practice aimed at altering a person’s sexual orientatio­n or gender identity.

O’Toole himself voted in favour of the bill, as did most Conservati­ve MPs.

But seven of his MPs voted against it, two abstained and eight others made it clear they were supporting it only grudgingly for now, in hopes that it will be amended by the Commons justice committee.

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