Ottawa Citizen

IT TOOK LESS THAN A WEEK FOR THE LIBERAL CAMPAIGN TO PAINT THE CONSERVATI­VE PARTY, AND ITS LEADER ERIN O'TOOLE, AS SECRET REACTIONAR­IES WHO WILL ROLL BACK HEALTH-CARE RIGHTS.

Tories attacked over conscience rights

- TYLER DAWSON tdawson@postmedia.com

It took less than a week for the Liberal campaign to paint the Conservati­ve party, and leader Erin O'Toole, as secret reactionar­ies who will roll back health-care rights such as access to abortion and assisted suicide.

In the 2019 federal election, the Liberals hammered then-leader Andrew Scheer for his reluctance and inability to offer clear answers about abortion and same-sex marriage. The Alberta New Democrats tried the same strategy against Jason Kenney's United Conservati­ves, also in 2019, but with markedly less success.

The Conservati­ve platform, released unusually early on day two of the campaign, contains on page 147 a reference to conscience rights, alongside promises to ban conversion therapy and end the ban on gay men donating blood.

“We will protect the conscience rights of health-care profession­als,” it says.

Katy Merrifield, the vice-president of Wellington Advocacy and the former director of communicat­ions for Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, said the Liberal internal polling must be “incredibly concerning” for them to resort to this tactic so early.

“It's day four of the campaign ... and they're already fear-mongering about social conservati­ve bogeymen that simply don't exist,” she said.

Carolyn Bennett, who served as minister of Crown-Indigenous Relations and is the Liberal candidate for Toronto-St. Paul's, said in a tweet Thursday that O'Toole was “pushing extreme-right policies.”

The promise, she claimed, would “let doctors deny and prevent referral for abortion, medical assistance in dying, and care for LGBTQ2 Canadians.”

“This is why we can't back down,” tweeted Katie Telford, Justin Trudeau's chief of staff.

Jason Lietaer, a former Conservati­ve strategist who's now with Enterprise, a strategic communicat­ions firm, said the Liberals take this tack because it's worked in the past. “It worked for them in 2004 when they branded Stephen Harper as a social conservati­ve even though he wasn't one, and it worked again for them in 2019 when they branded Andrew Scheer as social conservati­ve, and he was one, to be fair,” Lietaer said.

Charles Bird, who ran the Ontario campaign in 2005-6 for Paul Martin and is the managing principal at Earnscliff­e Strategy Group, said the Conservati­ves, by including such a platform promise, invited trouble, even if they were attempting to woo social conservati­ves.

“It leaves the party open to a host of potential attacks where Conservati­ves have traditiona­lly been very vulnerable,” Bird said. “It's likely the last thing Erin O'Toole needed during the first week of the federal campaign.”

Doctors in Canada may refuse to provide services to which they have moral or religious objections. When it comes to assisted suicide, for example, the Canadian Medical Associatio­n says it “equally supports conscienti­ous participat­ion in and conscienti­ous objection to assistance in dying by physicians.”

These policies are why a Christian doctor can refuse to provide abortions or medically assisted dying, though some doctors have also objected to providing fertility treatments, contracept­ion or prescribin­g erectile dysfunctio­n medication.

But, in the case of a refusal, in most provinces, doctors must refer a patient to a different physician.

In Alberta, doctors must provide “timely access” to another physician or provide a resource with informatio­n about the service; in Ontario, it must be an “effective referral,” whereas in Quebec, doctors must “offer to help the patient find another physician.”

IT WORKED FOR THEM IN 2004 ... AND IT WORKED AGAIN FOR THEM IN 2019.

In Manitoba, doctors need not refer a patient, but must provide further resources.

So far, the Conservati­ve party has declined to elaborate on the question of referrals, and whether or not the conscience rights protection­s they're proposing would broaden the ability of Canadian doctors to refuse referrals in addition to specific services.

But, in his run to become Conservati­ve leader in 2020, O'Toole's platform said he would protect “the conscience rights of all healthcare profession­als whose beliefs, religious or otherwise, prevent them from carrying out or referring patients for services that violate their conscience.”

In an email, a spokesman for the party told the National Post their position on conscience rights is the same as the Liberal position, and sent a number of quotes from Liberal politician­s about conscience rights.

O'Toole did attempt to address the issue on Thursday morning, saying he's prochoice, and that there needs to be a balance that respects doctors' conscience rights.

"I am pro-choice, I have a pro-choice record and that's how I will be. I think it's also possible to show respect for our nurses, our health-care profession­als, with respect particular­ly to the expansion of medical assistance in dying,” he said.

 ??  ?? Carolyn Bennett
Carolyn Bennett

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