Edmonton Journal

Philpott firm on abortion stance

- JOANNA SMITH

OTTAWA • Jane Philpott is standing by the pledge she made as a Liberal candidate to support access to abortion despite her beliefs, but accuses her former party of playing politics with a deeply personal issue.

The former cabinet minister is now running for re-election as an Independen­t in her suburban Toronto riding after being kicked out of the Liberal caucus in the wake of the Snc-lavalin affair. She said there are some areas where she might vote differentl­y from her former party if she returns to Ottawa after the Oct. 21 vote.

But abortion, which she described as a right that is both protected by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and upheld by the courts, is not one of the issues where she plans to change her approach.

“The commitment that I made as a Liberal not to oppose access to abortion is something that I will maintain a commitment to,” Philpott said in an interview on Wednesday.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau requires all Liberal MPS to vote with his government on matters of reproducti­ve health, and would-be candidates for his party are asked during the nomination process whether that will be a problem.

Philpott, a Mennonite and a family doctor, said her religious belief has no bearing on what she would do as an MP.

“I have personally never been in the circumstan­ce where I have had to make a decision like that,” said Philpott.

“If I were, my sense would be that unless there were extraordin­ary extenuatin­g circumstan­ces, that it would not be the right choice for me personally to make for myself,” she said, “but that has nothing to do with my obligation­s as a member of Parliament to uphold the broad rights that are well-documented for Canadians writ large.”

She did make clear that she disagrees with how the Liberals are talking about abortion in the run-up to the election campaign.

Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer was on the defensive last week after it emerged that his Quebec lieutenant, MP Alain Rayes, had been telling candidates in the province that backbench MPS would be forbidden from bringing forward any bills or motions on abortion.

That goes against party policy, which created confusion until Scheer, a practising Catholic who has voted in favour of restrictin­g abortion rights in the past, said he would oppose any attempt to reopen the debate as prime minister.

The Liberals were not the ones who brought up the abortion issue but they did jump at the opportunit­y to spread messages suggesting Scheer would restrict access to it should the Conservati­ves form the next government.

Philpott said she found that offensive.

“For Liberals in particular to politicize an issue that has to do with the choice that women make about their reproducti­ve rights, I think is highly opportunis­tic and shows a focus on political expediency rather than truly respecting something that is such a serious and important personal matter for Canadians,” she said.

She also criticized the Liberals for circulatin­g a 2005 speech by Scheer explaining his opposition to same-sex marriage, especially since many Liberal MPS, including some still in the caucus, once held those views.

“I think it’s what makes Canadians so cynical about politician­s,” said Philpott, while noting she firmly supports same-sex marriage.

“We should be talking about what good things we are going to do to improve the lives of Canadians, rather than finding ways to amp up divisions amongst Canadians,” she said.

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Jane Philpott

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