Politics

Feds get another month to reform assisted-dying law as bill stalls in the Commons

The federal government was granted one more month today to expand access to medical assistance in dying even as its efforts to do so stalled in the House of Commons.

Liberals accuse Conservatives of running out the clock

A doctor's hand on the hand of a senior patient in hospital examination room or hospice nursing home.
The federal government has received a fourth deadline extension from the courts to pass a new assisted death law. (BlurryMe/Shutterstock)

The federal government was granted one more month today to expand access to medical assistance in dying even as its efforts to do so stalled in the House of Commons.

Quebec Superior Court Justice Martin Sheehan agreed to give the government a fourth extension — until March 26 — to bring the law into compliance with a 2019 court ruling.

The decision came just one day before the previous deadline was to expire.

The 2019 ruling struck down a provision in the law that allows assisted dying only for those whose natural deaths are "reasonably foreseeable."

Bill C-7 is intended to bring the law into compliance with the ruling, expanding access to assisted dying to individuals experiencing intolerable suffering who are not approaching the ends of their lives.

Conservatives withhold unanimous consent

But the bill is stalled in the Commons, where the Conservatives refused for the third straight day today to facilitate debate on a motion laying out the government's response to amendments passed last week by the Senate.

Conservative MPs talked out the clock on the motion Tuesday and then refused the unanimous consent needed to extend the debate until midnight, despite calling last week for extended hours to allow thorough debate on the issue.

They refused unanimous consent again Wednesday to allow the Commons to sit into the night to wrap up debate on the motion. And they refused unanimous consent again to sit Thursday night.

The Bloc Quebecois offered to give up its opposition day today — an opportunity for it to set the agenda in the Commons — to allow debate on the motion to continue. The minority Liberal government said it decided that would be pointless, given the Conservatives' stalling tactics.

"Conservatives have twice blocked our proposal that the House sit late to debate this important issue, despite claiming that they want extended hours," Mark Kennedy, a spokesman for government House leader Pablo Rodriguez, said late Wednesday.

"Based on this, we now know that Conservatives will continue to obstruct, and cancelling the Bloc opposition day tomorrow will not change anything."

The Conservatives were largely opposed to the original bill and object even more strenuously to the amended version the government is now proposing.

Bill still has to go back before Senate

The bill originally would have imposed a blanket ban on assisted dying for people suffering solely from mental illnesses. The government is now proposing a two-year time limit on that exclusion — six months longer than the time limit approved by senators.

The government has rejected another Senate amendment that would have allowed advance requests for assisted dying, as well as an amendment intended to clarify what constitutes a mental illness. It has accepted a modified version of two other amendments.

The Bloc has said it will support the government's response to the Senate amendments, assuring the motion's eventual passage. But until Conservatives agree to wrap up debate, it can't be put to a vote.

Once the motion is passed, the bill will still have to go back to the Senate for senators to decide whether to accept the verdict of the elected parliamentary chamber or dig in their heels on their amendments.

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