Medicine Hat News

Contracept­ives must be covered by pharmacare: says NDP

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Every Canadian with a health card should be able to get free birth control and morning-after pills to ensure people have the right to do what they want with their body, federal New Democrat Leader Jagmeet Singh says.

The NDP are using their confidence-andsupply agreement with the Liberals to try and get the federal government to pay for contracept­ion, including intrauteri­ne devices or IUDs.

But on Friday, Singh reiterated his promise that the deal would fall apart if the federal government doesn’t meet a March 1 deadline to table a bill that works for both parties.

The Liberals and NDP have already agreed to cover birth control through a single-payer program in the first go around. They are also in talks to include diabetes drugs in the program.

Speaking to reporters in Coquitlam, B.C., during a campaign-style stop in front of a local pharmacy, Singh said “contracept­ion is a strong first step.”

“It’s something we’ve seen a lot of worry around,” he said, citing a rollback of abortion access in the United States and “the erosion of a woman’s right to choose.”

He said to respond to that, the Canadian government must ensure it tears down barriers that prevent some people from accessing contracept­ion.

In recent months, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has also raised concerns over new restrictio­ns on abortion access south of the border.

“We may think to ourselves, ‘This will never happen in Canada and this is just the Liberals bringing up the usual fear that they do.’ I’m sorry, it wasn’t ever supposed to happen in the United States either, and yet it did,” Trudeau said in a December interview with The Canadian Press.

“The threat is real.”

Singh said the New Democrats are willing to work “day and night and through the weekend” for the next couple of weeks to ensure a pharmacare deal is made.

British Columbia already covers many contracept­ives as part of its provincial pharmacare program, and Manitoba’s government has already pledged to do so as well.

Ontario also provides many contracept­ives for people under the age of 25 who don’t have private insurance.

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