Regina Leader-Post

Amendments to bill on sexual consent rejected

Changes need more study, Liberals say

- BRIAN PLATT bplatt@postmedia.com Twitter.com/btaplatt

OTTAWA • In a move that puts it offside with many feminist activists, the Liberal government has rejected Senate amendments to a bill that would have establishe­d a guide for courts on defining when a person is incapable of consenting to sexual activity.

The amendments were rejected in the Commons Monday in a vote of 240 to 35. The Liberals and Conservati­ves both voted against the amendments, with the NDP in favour.

Bill C-51 amends the Criminal Code to clarify that an unconsciou­s person can never be found to have consented to sexual activity. Activists argued this risked having judges rule — as they already occasional­ly do — that anything less than unconsciou­sness means a person is still capable of consenting. They urged the bill be amended to replace the “unconsciou­s” provision with one that gives judges a more comprehens­ive test to apply for when a person is too incapacita­ted to consent.

Sen. Kim Pate, who introduced the amendments, said she was disappoint­ed with their defeat in the House given that Liberals and Conservati­ves had recently supported a private member’s bill from former Conservati­ve MP Rona Ambrose to mandate training for judges on sexual assault cases.

“I find the response of the government and opposition to the Senate’s amendments all the more surprising and perplexing,” she said in an email Tuesday, pointing to a lineup of women’s advocates, feminist academics and rape crisis centres that backed the changes.

The government argued Pate’s amendments needed more study and went much further than what the bill was intended to address, which was a specific case dealing with an unconsciou­s woman.

“I agree that courts could benefit from guidance in making determinat­ions on a complainan­t’s incapacity to consent when she or he is conscious,” Justice Minister Jody Wilson-raybould told the House when introducin­g a motion to reject the amendments. But she said the changes needed to be crafted more carefully to ensure they didn’t cause problems in the courts.

“In short, the proposed changes are well-inten- tioned, but will not achieve their aim and, in fact, carry great risk of unintended consequenc­es in what is a difficult yet critical area of law,” she said. “Sexual assault law is too important to leave any room for error. If the definition of incapacity is to be provided, it is imperative we get it right.”

Tuesday, the Senate voted to pass the House’s version of Bill C-51, without the Senate amendments. Introduced by Wilson-raybould in June 2017, the bill includes a batch of reforms to sexual assault laws, in part to codify recent Supreme Court of Canada decisions.

One of those cases is R. v. J.A., which saw the legal system grapple with whether a woman can give advance consent to being unconsciou­s during sexual activity (the case involved choking that caused her to briefly pass out). The Supreme Court of Canada overturned an Ontario Court of Appeal decision, and ruled that an unconsciou­s person is never capable consenting to sexual activity, even in advance.

A clause in Bill C-51 thus amends the Criminal Code to explicitly say that a person cannot consent if they’re unconsciou­s, or if they’re incapable of giving consent “for any reason other than” being unconsciou­s.

But women’s groups argued this creates a danger of setting the legal threshold for consent too high. Karen Segal, a lawyer with the Women’s Legal Education and Action Fund, argued in testimony to MPS that the change would create a “bright line” on consent that could have unintended repercussi­ons.

“The provision adds nothing new to the law of sexual assault, which has long held that unconsciou­s women cannot consent to sexual contact, and risks opening the law of incapacity to being defined by unconsciou­sness as opposed to by an individual’s ability to provide informed and voluntary consent,” she said.

The House of Commons ultimately voted to keep the unconsciou­sness provision, but the argument found more support in the Senate.

During third-reading debate, Pate introduced amendments to replace the unconsciou­sness provision with a “guide” of three factors judges would have to consider when ruling on consent: the nature of the sexual activity, the risks and benefits involved in the attendant circumstan­ces, and the ability to say “no,” as well as the capacity to communicat­e consent by words or conduct. The Senate passed the amendments on Oct. 30.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Minister of Justice Jody Wilson-raybould says amendments to the Criminal Code need to be crafted carefully.
JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Minister of Justice Jody Wilson-raybould says amendments to the Criminal Code need to be crafted carefully.

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