Montreal Gazette

A reminder of the need for vigilance

Roe v. Wade bombshell in United States leaves me both outraged and concerned

- MARTINE ST-VICTOR Martine St-victor is general manager of Edelman Montreal and a media commentato­r. Instagram and Twitter: martinemon­treal

I don't remember a news leak ever having such an enormous impact. Earlier this week, a draft opinion from the Supreme Court of the United States suggested that the powerful institutio­n would vote to reverse Roe v. Wade, the 1973 landmark decision that guaranteed women's abortion rights.

I was in the United States when the news broke, late Monday night. The next morning, talk radio stations were inundated by call-ins from women who were furious and heartbroke­n. Many of them had participat­ed in the fight that led to the decision, almost 50 years ago. Others were daughters of mothers who had carried the battle.

Since Monday night, I've oscillated between fury and gratitude: Fury over my disbelief this violence against women could exist so close to us and gratitude because despite our proximity, Canadian soil feels safe. At least for now.

Yes, I know. The American and Canadian legal systems are as different as calculatin­g distance in miles or in kilometres. Still, allow me to be completely distraught about what's happening across the border.

Soon after the U.S. Supreme Court leak, the Conservati­ve Party of Canada instructed its members of Parliament to stay mum on abortion.

“This is an American issue that involves Americans. Canada has nothing to do with it,” Gérald Deltell, Conservati­ve MP for Louis Saint-laurent riding, said earlier this week. True, and attitudes in the two countries are very different. A 2020 DART poll revealed most Canadians identify as pro-choice, particular­ly in Quebec, where 73 per cent of us supported a woman's right to control whether she proceeds with a pregnancy. Because, well, it's her body. But popular assumption­s aside, the Supreme Court of Canada has never ruled that a woman's right to abortion is constituti­onally guaranteed.

And though Deltell wasn't wrong, he does hail from a party that increasing­ly seems to be sounding a lot like the U.S. Republican party. “Make Canada Great Again,” anyone? And it's a party that has members who oppose abortion and want to make their personal beliefs part of our politics. But more than a judicial reversal, which is unlikely, what I fear is the culture war reopening the abortion question might unleash. What we now are certain of is that some political parties thrive on polarizati­on. It's unbecoming, but it yields results. We've certainly seen it in Quebec.

Former Quebec premier Jean Charest, who is now running for the federal Conservati­ve leadership, tweeted this week that he was prochoice. Charest added that a government under his leadership would not support legislatio­n restrictin­g reproducti­ve rights. He ended his tweet by writing that while he respected the democratic rights of MPS to bring forward private members' bills on matters of conscience, he would not vote to support them.

For his part, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tweeted that the right to choose is a woman's right and a woman's right alone and that every woman in Canada has a right to a safe and legal abortion. He ended his statement by saying that Canada would never back down from protecting and promoting women's rights here and around the world. Here and around the world, yes. This is why what's happening down south should also be our concern, as it was when the Taliban took over in Afghanista­n, pulverizin­g women's rights.

The fact leading political figures feel they have to even tweet out reassuranc­es should worry us.

Unlike the case of Afghanista­n, we won't be sending troops to the United States, but when women's rights are at risk, regardless of geography, we should see it as a threat to all women. We should be outraged. We should worry. And so if this week's bombshell news from out of the U.S. can serve as a reminder, let it be that we should remain vigilant and take no right for granted.

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