Mr. Speaker, I want to thank my friend the member for Don Valley West and also my friend the member for Kitchener—Conestoga. I do not recall, in the five years that I have been in this place, a conversation or a debate that has taken place over an issue that is this difficult where there has been as much respect given one side to the other, one member to the other. We all recognize this is a deeply difficult issue. It is an ethical issue, it is an issue of rights, and it is also an issue of individual morality. It is a tough one, to put it mildly.
However, I am concerned about one part of this legislation that the hon. member for Don Valley West touched upon; that is, the notion of insisting that the person be capable of, once again, reasserting their decision to ask for physician-assisted death even after they have lost the capacity to have mental competence.
Again, on this question of an advance directive, this section of the legislation goes against the very essence of what the Supreme Court of Canada said we must do, which is to not put people in a position where they feel they must take their own life prematurely. They want to be able to trust the fact that they have made determinations for their end-of-life care.
I put that to my friend, the member for Don Valley West. Is that not, in a sense, asking the impossible, to ask someone who lacks mental competence to reaffirm a very clear decision that was made when they had mental competence?