House of Commons Hansard #14 of the 43rd Parliament, 2nd Session. (The original version is on Parliament's site.) The word of the day was medical.

Topics

Criminal CodeGovernment Orders

5:45 p.m.

Bloc

Sébastien Lemire Bloc Abitibi—Témiscamingue, QC

Mr. Speaker, I want to begin by acknowledging my colleague's ability to focus and to find work-life balance in these difficult times. I would also like to commend the progressive values that he brings to many of his interventions, including at the Standing Committee on Industry, Science and Technology and in the current debate.

I wanted to address the end of his speech and give him a chance to elaborate.

Does my colleague agree with the possibility of granting the right to waive final consent in cases where natural death is unforeseeable? How might we further facilitate this step for the victims of this mechanism?

Criminal CodeGovernment Orders

5:45 p.m.

Liberal

Nathaniel Erskine-Smith Liberal Beaches—East York, ON

Mr. Speaker, the advantage of any view that respects personal autonomy is that one is not tied to a decision one has made: one can always revisit it. The importance of advance requests is that people might lose capacity. If one is suffering intolerably, as in the case of Audrey Parker, but is so worried that she is not going to be able to make a decision to end her life and access death with dignity because she might lose capacity, then we, of course, need an advance request and that is exactly what this bill would provide.

As for the second category, where an individual has been diagnosed and has not yet begun to suffer intolerably, when they have made it very clear that this is what they want as a matter of personal autonomy, we have to respect that as well. Of course, if we are to respect personal autonomy, one can always withdraw when one has the capacity to do so.

Criminal CodeGovernment Orders

5:45 p.m.

NDP

Heather McPherson NDP Edmonton Strathcona, AB

Mr. Speaker, my colleague's comments were very thoughtful and certainly resonated with me. My father-in-law is currently in a situation where he cannot give consent any longer. He is trapped in a situation that we know he would not want to be in, so a lot of the comments the member brought forward really resonate with me.

At the beginning of his comments, the member talked a lot about intolerable suffering and the need to alleviate that intolerable suffering. I am wondering if he could talk a bit about where we came up with the 90 days.

Where did the Liberal government come up with 90 days as the amount of time we should make people wait, in intolerable suffering, before they can get relief?

Criminal CodeGovernment Orders

5:45 p.m.

Liberal

Nathaniel Erskine-Smith Liberal Beaches—East York, ON

Mr. Speaker, I can honestly say I have no idea, and I do not think the 90 days are justified in the end. I think the committee should examine this timeline and correct it. I hope, when this bill comes back to the House for third reading, that we have avoided the blanket exclusion for mental illness. If need be, we can add a sunset clause to that provision to give the government more time, if necessary, but I hope we avoid the blanket exclusion indefinitely. Second, I hope that we cure that 90-day period and reduce it significantly. We cannot possibly want Canadians who are still of sound mind to suffer intolerably for such an extended period of time.

Criminal CodeGovernment Orders

5:45 p.m.

Conservative

Ted Falk Conservative Provencher, MB

Mr. Speaker, it is a privilege to have this opportunity to rise and speak on Bill C-7, an act to amend the Criminal Code (medical assistance in dying).

Not long ago, we in the House debated the merits of Bill C-14. I was a member of the justice committee when the committee was seized with doing that. That opened the door to physician-assisted death in Canada.

I want to begin my speech today with the same words that I used to open my speech on that bill:

I believe in the sanctity of life, and I believe that all life, from conception right through to natural death, has value, has worth, and has purpose.

A pastor friend of mine told me a story that had happened just prior to the passing of Bill C-14 in 2016. A woman the pastor knew who had battled stage four cancer for 10 years, savouring every moment of that time with her grandbabies and family, was told by one of her care workers, “I bet you cannot wait for the assisted-suicide bill to pass.” The pastor recalled the desperation in her tears when she called to recount her story, asking, “Has my life only become a burden to society?”

After the legislation was in effect, another woman was reunited with her childhood sweetheart and engaged to get married when her fiancé discovered that he had stage four cancer. Together they mustered up every possible hope for a future together, only to have their hopes dimmed by repeated offers for medical assistance in dying.

As the House now considers an expansion of MAID, I think it remains vitally important that the worth of every person is reaffirmed and underscored. It must be our priority in this place to remind every Canadian that they have value regardless of their age. They have value regardless of their ability. Their dignity is not determined by their suffering or their autonomy. It is intrinsic. It is inherent. Their lives are worth living.

I think these statements are important, because the reality is that every time we talk about expanding access to MAID, we send a troubling message to those who may be vulnerable: the idea that, if certain conditions or factors are present, somehow a person's life has less worth; the idea that ending a person's life is a mere medical decision among any number of medical decisions.

Expanding eligibility cannot be about removing safeguards and fundamentally redefining the nature and role of assisted death. This bill intends to offer assisted dying to individuals who are not dying, whose lives are still viable. This is a contentious issue that has been raised by multiple legal voices because assisted death was previously sold as an option only when death was imminent, or reasonably foreseeable.

In just four short years, we have embarked beyond that final stage of suffering. The whole health care system is feeling the pressure for acceptance of MAID, says Nicole Scheidl. Doctors and medical staff are feeling this pressure. Scheidl adds that the most terrifying thing about MAID is how it will impact the future of medicine, as only doctors comfortable with MAID will go into medicine, unless perhaps some provision is made for conscience rights.

Cardus executive vice-president Ray Pennings warns us that Bill C-7 does not take the protection of conscience rights seriously. He writes:

Conscience rights are Charter rights...including the rights of medical professionals not to participate in MAID in any way and the rights of hospices and other institutions not to cause the deaths of people in their care.

There are other valid concerns as well: psychological suffering in combination with other permanent injuries potentially justified under MAID, the elimination of the 10-day waiting period, the requirement for only one independent witness as opposed to two, the waiving of final consent, and also that a witness cannot be a primary caregiver.

Even in its current form internationally, MAID raises flags. When the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the rights of persons with disabilities visited Canada in 2019, she noted that she was extremely concerned about the implementation of MAID from a disability perspective. She flagged that:

there is no protocol in place to demonstrate that persons with disabilities have been provided with viable alternatives when eligible for assistive dying.

She highlighted:

...claims about persons with disabilities in institutions being pressured to seek medical assistance in dying, and practitioners not formally reporting cases involving persons with disabilities.

Her advice was to:

put into place adequate safeguards to ensure that persons with disabilities do not request assistive dying simply because of the absence of community-based alternatives and palliative care.

Instead, Bill C-7 goes the opposite direction in order to expand eligibility.

Let us not forget that every choice we make has a ripple effect of different magnitudes. Mother Teresa once said, “I alone cannot change the world, but I can cast a stone across the waters to create many ripples.” The world can be changed for better or worse. When vulnerable people start feeling like they are only a burden to society because of our actions, we need to consider what kind of culture we are creating.

Kory Earle, the president of People First of Canada, a national organization representing people with intellectual disabilities, expresses his concern that everything is already more difficult for people with intellectual disabilities, including exclusion, isolation, housing, resources when abused, education, securing jobs, social lives and finding friends. He further adds that even their word in court is not considered credible. Mr. Earle explains, “everything, and I mean EVERYTHING, is more difficult for people with intellectual disabilities. Many, many other things should be made easier. This [assisted death] is not one of them.”

Passing Bill C-7 is sending a message that individuals with disabilities are no longer safe. This concern is echoed in a joint statement by over 140 lawyers who fear the perception this bill gives, if even unintentional, the perception that life with a disability is inferior and if ratified by law, we diminish the choice to live with dignity and exasperates systemic discrimination.

On top of this, Canada has tragic statistics around suicide. An average of 10 people die by suicide every day. Statistics reveal that nine of those 10 individuals faced a mental health problem or illness. I know and appreciate that those suffering solely from mental illnesses are not eligible for MAID under Bill C-7, but we are nonetheless sending a devastatingly mixed message.

The former Liberal member for Winnipeg Centre raised these concerns when we were first considering Bill C-14. As he observed the rash of suicides in several first nations communities at that time, he expressed concern that, “we haven't thought out the complete ramifications that a decision like this might have on indigenous communities that seem to be suffering greatly.”

In his speech, he shared one of his memories as a six-year-old child. His family was facing serious financial hardship, forcing his mother to go off in search of work. He and his younger brother were to stay with their father, who he described as “a residential school survivor, an alcoholic, and a member of gangs” with a “terrible temper”.

The rest I will quote directly from the former member. He said:

I remember climbing a tree in the back yard and wrapping a rope around my neck at the age of six... I wrapped that rope around my neck and thought, “Should I jump off into this universe, which is before me?” It was in that back yard that somehow I made the decision to climb down out of that tree and unwind that rope from around my neck.

If in my life I had seen, or I had known, that my grandmother had somehow used physician-assisted dying or physician-assisted suicide, or others in my family had completed the irreparable act, then it would have made it much more difficult for me to continue.

We must be mindful of the messages we send through this debate and always affirm life, but we must also do more than just offer words. We need to ensure that individuals facing end of life have access to the end-of-life care they deserve.

There are important questions we need to be asking to ensure those who are suffering truly have a choice between living well and pursuing MAID. For example, how do we better love those who live in unbearable pain, whatever form that pain takes? Feeling loved gives inherent strength to those losing hope. How do we show people how their lives teach us? How do their contributions strengthen us as individuals and a society? How do we instill in all people that they are not a bother, a financial burden or a disruption to deal with, but that their life is treasured? We must foster this type of society that affirms life and the pursuit of well-being.

As four physicians suggested in the National Post in response to the proposed legislation, increasing health care personnel, improving our quality of care, enhancing our palliative care options and ensure quicker access to psychiatric care would all be more advisable. Instead, we are “fast-tracking death on demand and dismantling the...[earlier] safeguards that were put in place to protect the vulnerable.”

We have all heard that only 30% of Canadians have access to palliative care and disability supports, which is possibly why there were 50 religious leaders who wrote an open letter urging us to consider that. It states:

Palliative care administered with unwavering compassion, generosity and skill expresses the best of who we are. Rather than withdrawing from those who are not far from leaving us, we must embrace them even more tightly, helping them to find meaning up to the last moments of life. This is how we build compassionate communities.

Furthermore, the joint statement by 140 lawyers explains that singling out non-life threatening illness and disability as eligibility criteria for assisted death—

Criminal CodeGovernment Orders

6 p.m.

Conservative

The Deputy Speaker Conservative Bruce Stanton

I am sorry, we will have to finish there. The time has expired for the member's comments. He may be able to reflect on some of those ideas when he answers questions and comments.

Questions and comments, the hon. parliamentary secretary to the government House leader.

Criminal CodeGovernment Orders

6 p.m.

Winnipeg North Manitoba

Liberal

Kevin Lamoureux LiberalParliamentary Secretary to the President of the Queen’s Privy Council for Canada and to the Leader of the Government in the House of Commons

Mr. Speaker, I remember quite well the former member for Winnipeg Centre and his speech on Bill C-14. One of the things I can recall from the Bill C-14 debate was there were a lot of examples, real-life stories. I say that because it is important for us to recognize the seriousness of the legislation we are debating. Ultimately it will go to committee, where there will be opportunities to have that dialogue and who knows what it will eventually come back as.

Does the member believe the bill is moving us in the right direction?

Criminal CodeGovernment Orders

6 p.m.

Conservative

Ted Falk Conservative Provencher, MB

Mr. Speaker, I do not believe the bill is moving us in the right direction. We should be strengthening the bill by adding additional safeguards for vulnerable people. It has been clearly demonstrated that people with disabilities are very concerned the bill does not go far enough to provide them the protection they are looking for.

I have heard from many health care providers, physicians, nurses and those who assist those health care professionals, who themselves are also health care professionals, express concerns that adequate conscience rights protections have not been built into the bill. It is something I have heard over and over in my riding and it is very important to health professionals. They want clearly articulated conscience rights protection inside the bill.

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6 p.m.

Bloc

Louise Chabot Bloc Thérèse-De Blainville, QC

Mr. Speaker, I have a related question.

It is my understanding that, essentially, the member will vote against the bill for considerations that have more to do with religion and faith than with the bill before us.

When we talk about the right to life, and tell people that we have values, that dignity is intrinsic and that life is precious, does Bill C-7 not align with all that even though it is not perfect? With respect to their right to life and dignity, does a person who is suffering and who has an incurable disease not have the right to choose this solution after we have had a wide-ranging debate? Is that not a response? How is that not a response?

Criminal CodeGovernment Orders

6 p.m.

Conservative

Ted Falk Conservative Provencher, MB

Mr. Speaker, the member's question is one that many people ask. My response is that a lot of people would make different choices if they had access to better palliative care. We know 70% of people across Canada do not have access to the palliative care they deserve. Even people with very uncomfortable and some would say intolerable diseases and situations, with the proper amount of palliative care, would have a different opinion than when confronted with the option of medical assistance in dying.

In fact, I spoke to a doctor at a function not that long ago. He said that when it came to MAID, they already had the technology to make people comfortable so they would not experience pain. They also could give them drugs. They had access to drugs that would also take away any psychological anxiety people may experience with their intolerable diseases. He said that there was no need for MAID.

Criminal CodeGovernment Orders

6:05 p.m.

Hull—Aylmer Québec

Liberal

Greg Fergus LiberalParliamentary Secretary to the President of the Treasury Board and to the Minister of Digital Government

Mr. Speaker, I am very pleased to speak today in support of Bill C-7, which proposes amendments to the Criminal Code's medical assistance in dying regime in response to the Superior Court of Quebec's Truchon decision.

As members know, prior to the prorogation of Parliament, we introduced former Bill C-7, which proposed amendments to the MAID legislation and made it to second reading in the House. With the opening of this new session, we are reintroducing the same proposed changes as Bill C-7.

In September 2019, the Superior Court of Quebec struck down the federal and Quebec criteria limiting MAID to end-of-life circumstances. The court suspended its declaration of invalidity for six months, until March 11, 2020. In February, the Attorney General of Canada obtained an extension to provide enough time for Parliament to respond to the Quebec court's ruling and create a consistent MAID regime across the country.

Unfortunately, the disruptions to the parliamentary process resulting from COVID-19 made it impossible to meet this deadline. On June 29, the Superior Court of Quebec granted the request of the Attorney General of Canada for a second extension, until December 18, 2020.

Before I turn to the content of the bill, this legislation was informed by the Truchon decision itself, available Canadian international reports, the experience of existing international regimes and the government's consultations on medical aid in dying held in January and February earlier this year.

With respect to the consultations, the Minister of Justice, Minister of Health and Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Disability Inclusion as well as their parliamentary secretaries hosted medical aid in dying round tables across the country. There were more than 125 stakeholders in attendance, including health regulatory bodies, legal experts, doctors, nurse practitioners, representatives of the disability community and indigenous representatives. They all shared their experiences and insights into MAID and its implementation in Canada over the last four years.

In parallel to these efforts, the government hosted an online public survey in January and received over 300,000 responses from people all across the country, an unprecedented number of responses, that reflects the significance of this issue for Canadians. A summary of the consultations was released in March as a “What We Heard Report”.

I would like to speak to the two proposed Criminal Code amendments in relation to eligibility for MAID.

First, the bill would amend the list of eligibility criteria so that it would no longer be necessary for a person’s natural death to be reasonably foreseeable. This change would respond directly to the Quebec Superior Court’s ruling in Truchon and Gladu.

Second, the amendments proposed in this bill would make persons whose sole underlying medical condition is a mental illness ineligible for MAID. Members may recall that the Council of Canadian Academies’ expert group on this issue could not come to a consensus on this question. This lack of agreement was also evident among participants at the MAID roundtables.

This complicated issue should be studied as part of the five-year parliamentary review of the medical aid in dying legislation.

With respect to applicable safeguards, the proposed Criminal Code amendments will create two different sets of safeguards, depending on whether the person's natural death is reasonably foreseeable or not. The first set of safeguards will continue to be tailored to the persons whose natural death is reasonably foreseeable where risks are reduced.

The second set of safeguards would be tailored to persons whose natural death is not reasonably foreseeable or who are not dying at all and would address the elevated risks associated with the diverse sources of suffering and vulnerability that could lead to a person who is not nearing death to seek access to medical aid in dying.

Bill C-7 proposes to use the “reasonable foreseeability of natural death” standard to determine which set of safeguards apply to a particular case.

In terms of those whose death is reasonably foreseeable, the bill proposes to ease some of the existing safeguards. Specifically, it would require that a medical aid in dying request be witnessed by one independent witness instead of two, and it would allow individuals who are paid to provide either health or personal care to act as an independent witness. Bill C-7 also proposes to repeal the 10-day mandatory reflection period.

With respect to the second set of safeguards that would apply to those whose deaths are not reasonably foreseeable, in addition to the same witness requirement being eased, the following new and clarified safeguards would apply.

The first new safeguard would require a minimum period of 90 days for the assessment of a person’s eligibility. This safeguard reflects the need to ensure that the assessment takes the time needed to address the additional challenges and concerns that may arise in the context of assessing the MAID request of a person whose death is not foreseeable, and who may have many years or even decades left to live. These include, for example, considering whether the person’s suffering is caused by factors other than the medical condition and whether there are ways to address the suffering other than MAID.

The second new safeguard would require that one of the two mandatory eligibility assessments be conducted by a practitioner with expertise in the condition that is causing the person's suffering. This would require that all treatment options to be explored before medical aid in dying is provided, while avoiding the need for specialist involvement, which could pose a barrier in remote and rural areas.

The existing requirement for informed consent would be clarified in two ways. First, the person would have to receive information on available and appropriate services that could help address their situation. Second, the person and the practitioners would have to agree that reasonable means to alleviate the person's suffering had been seriously considered before medical aid in dying could be provided. These proposed safeguards reflect the seriousness of ending the life of someone who is not nearing death, the importance of protecting vulnerable individuals who may seek medical aid in dying and would support a fully informed decision in this regard.

The bill also proposes amendments that would allow people whose natural death is reasonably foreseeable and who have been assessed and approved for medical aid in dying to retain their ability to receive MAID if they lose the capacity to consent before the day of the procedure. Certain conditions would need to be met, including having a scheduled date for the procedure, that the person gives consent to receive MAID on that date even if they have lost capacity, and that the practitioner agrees to provide MAID on the patient's scheduled date or before if the capacity is lost before that time.

This bill, I believe, seeks to balance several interests and societal values, including the autonomy of persons who are eligible to receive medical aid in dying and the need to protect vulnerable persons from being induced to end their lives. It represents a significant paradigm shift, and I hope one that will meet the consensus of the members of this Parliament.

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6:10 p.m.

Conservative

Brad Redekopp Conservative Saskatoon West, SK

Mr. Speaker, I thank my colleague for his speech, but I am a little confused. He mentioned the different groups that were consulted and the 300,000 responses that were received, but it was my understanding that there was to be a legislative review of the MAID legislation this year in June, which did not happen and still has not happened. It almost seems like the government did not want to let the normal process happen and instead wanted to control it and provide the information it wanted, or perhaps the minister wanted to pursue his own agenda or his own vision.

Why did the government not deal with the Truchon issue that needed to be dealt with and leave the rest of the changes until after the proper legislative review had been completed as required by the legislation?

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6:15 p.m.

Liberal

Greg Fergus Liberal Hull—Aylmer, QC

Mr. Speaker, as the member will recall, back at the time the legislation was supposed to have been reviewed, Parliament had taken the extraordinary step of sitting in a reduced format in order to comply with the outbreak of COVID-19. As a result, any legislation, as had been agreed to by all House leaders, would deal uniquely with the issue of COVID-19.

That is also why the Minister of Justice sought to have an extension granted by the courts until the end of this year, knowing that when we got back in the fall we would be able to pick up where we left off in March and continue the evaluation going forward.

I would also like to reassure the member that the legislation provides an opportunity for us to review this in five years, so that we can once again take a look, take stock of the situation in terms of how it is being used or how it is not being used appropriately, and make changes accordingly.

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6:15 p.m.

Bloc

Mario Simard Bloc Jonquière, QC

Mr. Speaker, the Bloc Québécois shares our Liberal colleague's point of view.

I would like to ask him a question about something one of our Conservative colleagues said earlier. He tried to make a connection between suicide and medical assistance in dying. It seems to me that this kind of connection is more often made to align with a certain right-leaning and often religious way of thinking.

Knowing that Conservative Party members have already indicated they wanted a free vote on this issue, I would like to hear my colleague's thoughts on what might motivate a parliamentarian to vote against this kind of bill.

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6:15 p.m.

Liberal

Greg Fergus Liberal Hull—Aylmer, QC

Mr. Speaker, I would like to thank my colleague from Jonquière for his question.

With all due respect, I have to say, this is a very difficult and very sensitive issue for many people.

This situation is intimately linked to one's personal values and religious values, which may be at odds with the values of freedom guaranteed in the Canadian charter and the Quebec charter. This is a very difficult debate for many people. I do not wish to trivialize the values he brings with him to Parliament.

I think there is a consensus. However, I want to respect all viewpoints. Our colleague from Manitoba shared his perspective and our colleague from Toronto shared a different one. We must try to balance the two and use common sense.

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6:15 p.m.

Liberal

Bob Bratina Liberal Hamilton East—Stoney Creek, ON

Mr. Speaker, I would like to bring my colleague back to the very beginning, when we began this discussion in the previous Parliament and, remarkably, got a bill through.

I know it is hard to achieve perfection, but I am encouraged by the fact that a five-year review is in place. Does the member realize that there are many opposing views on this? We have heard them all. We are not working with underlying motives. We are working toward a good result for Canadians. Would the member agree with that?

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6:20 p.m.

Liberal

Greg Fergus Liberal Hull—Aylmer, QC

Mr. Speaker, I would agree. I must say I have grown and evolved around this issue. That is why I feel I can understand both perspectives on this issue. I have been very pleased in hearing the debate so far.

We have struck the right balance, but I understand why those who would want us to go further certainly would want us to do so. I can also appreciate the perspective of people who would want us to hold back a little.

It is not perfect, as my hon. colleague from the Hamilton area has said. However, we will not let perfection become the enemy of the good. We have a fair compromise that strikes the right balance.

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6:20 p.m.

Conservative

Pat Kelly Conservative Calgary Rocky Ridge, AB

Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to join the debate. The last several speakers raised some excellent points. It is good to see members bring different perspectives to this debate, and I hope to achieve that as well tonight.

I would like to say broadly at the outset that, in a binary world where one must say they are either in favour or not in favour of the availability of medical assistance in dying for people who are adults, mentally competent, grievously and irremediably ill and suffering cruelly from intolerable pain and anguish, I support the availability of assistance in dying for those people.

However, this bill and few bills we would consider in the House are as simple as a binary choice between two poles. Although we have had all kinds of different perspectives on this, the nuances and the details of this bill, as well as the bill that preceded it, Bill C-14, are very important. I enjoy these types of debates where we hear these points of view and can hopefully improve a bill before it is passed, if it is indeed the will of this Parliament to pass the bill.

I have ordinarily been highly critical of the government on a host of issues. I will take advantage of this moment to say that although there was much consternation to get to the final vote that occurred on Bill C-14 in the previous Parliament, there was something in that process that brought out what is good in Parliament. At that time, we had a lot of different perspectives on that bill. We had a bill that was tabled and amended. It was amended in this chamber. It had committee amendments, many of them, that were brought back and voted on by different parties, and we saw members of the Liberals' side who did not agree with their government for a variety of reasons. There were members, including me, who ultimately at third reading did vote with the government to support it.

That is what Parliament should do. It should bring out vigorous debate that really gets to the heart of an issue in order to have good legislation. I thought Bill C-14, at the time, was a reasonable limited change to criminal law in Canada to both comply with the Carter decision and establish the availability of medical assistance in dying. Credit also should go to members who are no longer a part of the government: the member for Vancouver Granville, who was the minister of justice at the time; and Jane Philpott, who was the minister of health and who showed leadership at that time in debating Bill C-14.

The bill before us today was introduced ostensibly to deal with the Truchon decision and the Quebec superior court's striking down of the reasonable foreseeability phrase from Bill C-14. In this bill, the government has chosen to address other issues at this time. As has been pointed out, there was to be a five-year review, per the previous bill, that should have occurred this summer. I understand the crisis we are in, but let us also not forget we have a government that prorogued the House and prevented the House from examining critical legislation and issues that face Canadians.

The timing of the bill puts us up against something of a deadline looming in December over the Truchon decision, and here we are. December is not very far away when we talk about all the different stages a bill must go through to do it right, to allow all voices to be heard and to allow all members of Parliament to represent their constituents on this.

The bill introduces a few changes beyond addressing the reasonable foreseeability. I am not going to get into the details of that, because time is passing. However, like most MPs, I have received a lot of correspondence and phone calls from the disability community and concerned citizens who have real reservations about any expansion of medical assistance in dying.

Some have argued from the point of view of a slippery slope and are concerned: Once changes are adopted, what comes after them? I understand the sincerity of these concerns. However, we have to examine the bill for what it says and what it does rather than what people might project into it.

Prior to the adoption of Bill C-14, I had four major concerns regarding medical assistance in dying: first, the assurance that quality palliative care be available to persons considering medical assistance in dying; second, strong safeguards for vulnerable Canadians, such as minors, the mentally ill and the disabled; third, the conscience protection for medical practitioners; and fourth, any changes that would expand the availability of medical assistance in dying be well considered, well thought out, carefully drafted and not rushed.

I share many of the concerns raised by members of the disability community, but we have to deal with this issue and not forget the broader purpose of ensuring the availability of medical assistance in dying. It is not merely to comply with court rulings. We must do this out of a sense of compassion for adults who are grievously ill, intolerably suffering and are of sound mind, and who, of their own free will and volition, wish to obtain medical assistance in dying.

I would not support the bill if I thought it was a clear threat to disabled Canadians or if the bill would lead us into a path where medical assistance in dying is offered as an alternative to palliative care or an alternative to treatment. I do not see that in the bill as is. Recalling the experience of Bill C-14, I assume that the bill will be thoroughly studied and that the committee, after it hears testimony from experts and concerned Canadians, will bring amendments back to the House that may offer better assurance to the disabled community and others.

I am inclined to see the bill go forward as far as committee so that we can have a robust, thorough examination of the bill, and so that as parliamentarians, we can do our legislative jobs to ensure that the best bill possible is brought back to Parliament. I look forward to that and assume that we will have this debate.

I am still a little concerned, though. My colleague from Hull—Aylmer mentioned the five-year review and that a committee hearing would constitute that review. This is what it sounded like he was saying, and this does not seem to be in the spirit of what was passed by the House in Bill C-14. However, there is clearly much work to do in this area, and I hope we will have time for a robust, full and proper hearing of the bill at committee so that when the bill comes back to the chamber at third reading, it will give assurances to those who have raised concerns about medical assistance in dying, in particular to the disabled community.

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6:30 p.m.

Bloc

Maxime Blanchette-Joncas Bloc Rimouski-Neigette—Témiscouata—Les Basques, QC

Mr. Speaker, I thank my hon. colleague for participating in the debate and for his speech, which is very much appreciated.

I take it that he will vote in favour of the bill. I know that some of his colleagues may be opposed to the bill. However, I will not directly mention the Conservative members who will be voting against this bill.

I learned that 52 religious groups have launched a coordinated campaign against Bill C-7.

It is called “Religious Leaders in Canada oppose Bill C-7”.

Fifty-two religious groups are opposed to the bill.

They include Canadian Assemblies of God, Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops, Evangelical Free Church of Canada and Canadian Baptists of Western Canada.

There are 48 other groups that are also against it.

I just want to ask my colleague if he believes that the religious principles of some people should be set aside when it is a matter of respecting the choice of all Canadians.

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6:30 p.m.

Conservative

Pat Kelly Conservative Calgary Rocky Ridge, AB

Mr. Speaker, one of the four major concerns I have about the notion of medical assistance in dying relates to the conscience protection for practitioners. I think what the member was drilling to in the question is making sure that the conscience of professionals in the medical field is protected. I support wholeheartedly groups that have this concern. That is one of the main areas of concern I have with the bill.

I certainly recognize that there are very strong feelings on the bill all around. The responsibility of this Parliament is to try to get it right, satisfy the judgments that have already been delivered and get a bill that, broadly speaking—

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6:30 p.m.

Conservative

The Deputy Speaker Conservative Bruce Stanton

Questions and comments, by video conference, the hon. member for Saanich—Gulf Islands.

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6:30 p.m.

Green

Elizabeth May Green Saanich—Gulf Islands, BC

Mr. Speaker, I want to commend my hon. colleague from Calgary Rocky Ridge for a thoughtful speech that did not fall into the trap of partisanship. This is a very difficult issue, and having been part of the debates in Parliament since the first version of medical assistance in dying came forward, I have been taken with how we as a chamber have approached the issue respectfully from all sides.

This is a comment; I am not putting a question to my hon. colleague, so he can amplify his points. I am deeply grateful that he is drawing a line where he does not see evidence of moving into an area that would put people with disabilities at risk or moving into an area that would make him uncomfortable. This does more than make sure we are within the law and respecting the rights of individuals who legitimately need medical assistance in dying.

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6:30 p.m.

Conservative

Pat Kelly Conservative Calgary Rocky Ridge, AB

Mr. Speaker, I thank the member for her comments, but I do have these concerns that members of the disability community have raised. It is critical to me, before I vote at third reading in support of the bill, that the protections for the disabled community remain, that we do not enter into scenarios where medical assistance in dying is foisted on somebody and that this will remain merely for those who seek it as a result of grievous cruelty and suffering from an irremediable condition.

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6:35 p.m.

Conservative

Martin Shields Conservative Bow River, AB

Mr. Speaker, I think this has to do with the sense of a court deadline. Our Parliament is constructing legislation. We are working on it. I refuse to accept the idea of being blackmailed into not doing a full and thorough review. We did not do one with Bill C-14. I think the courts would fully understand.

Would my colleague respond to this deadline, which is really blackmailing us into a rush?

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6:35 p.m.

Conservative

Pat Kelly Conservative Calgary Rocky Ridge, AB

Mr. Speaker, the hon. member for Bow River makes a great point, and I did touch on the review in my speech.

The committee hearing on the bill is not a substitute for the fulsome review that was promised in Bill C-14. I am concerned about the rushed timeline, and I identified in my remarks that for the bill to be fully supported at third reading, things must be done properly. It has to be drafted and worded carefully and thoughtfully, following a proper and robust consultation by the appropriate parliamentary committee.