Wednesday, June 24, 2026
ADVT 
National

A timeline of how Canada's assisted dying laws evolved

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jun, 2026 09:52 AM
  • A timeline of how Canada's assisted dying laws evolved

Efforts to legalize assisted dying in Canada date back decades and the issue has been the subject of debate in Parliament and at the country's top court.

Here are some key dates:

1892: Canada's first Criminal Code included a provision that barred people from aiding and abetting suicide and carried a sentence of life in prison. It also criminalized suicide.

1972: The federal government under Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau repealed the Criminal Code section that criminalized suicide. The government left in place the provision that made it a criminal offence to aid or abet a person ending their life, and another provision that said no person could consent to their life being ended.

1991-2010: The House of Commons debated six private member's bills seeking to decriminalize assisted suicide. None passed.

1993: Sue Rodriguez, a woman diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis or ALS, challenged the Criminal Code provision banning assisted suicide in the country's highest court. The Supreme Court of Canada ruled against her in a 5-4 decision. Rodriguez died with the help of an anonymous physician in 1994.

1995: A Senate committee released a special report on euthanasia and assisted suicide.

While members of the committee held different views on how to deal with the suffering of people who are dying, their report said all had "deep concerns about the implications of permitting assisted suicide."

Those who supported it suggested minimum safeguards. They said that a person receiving assisted death must be competent, must be suffering from an irreversible illness that has reached an intolerable stage, and must have made a free and informed request without coercion.

2009: The Collège des médecins du Québec released a discussion paper that concluded euthanasia could be a final step in end-of-life care under exceptional circumstances, like uncontrollable pain or interminable suffering.

2010: By this time, some form of assisted dying was legal in the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Colombia and the U.S. states of Oregon, Washington and Montana.

2011: The British Columbia Civil Liberties Association filed a lawsuit challenging the two sections of the Criminal Code outlawing assisted death, arguing they violated the Section 7 guarantee in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms of "life, liberty and security of the person."

This case, brought on behalf of Lee Carter, Hollis Johnson, William Shoichet and Gloria Taylor, became known as Carter v. Canada.

2012: The Supreme Court of British Columbia ruled in favour of the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association in the Carter case. The federal government under Prime Minister Stephen Harper appealed.

2012: A committee of Quebec's National Assembly released a report on "dying with dignity" after two years of work that included expert opinions, public consultation and travel to France, Belgium and the Netherlands.

The report concluded that medical aid in dying, or MAID, should be an additional option for end-of-life care in Quebec for a consenting adult patient suffering from a serious, incurable disease who is in an advanced state of decline.

2013: The Carter case went to the Court of Appeal for British Columbia.

The Appeal Court overturned the lower court's ruling, finding the judge should have upheld the Supreme Court of Canada's decision in Rodriguez. The B.C. Civil Liberties Association sought leave to appeal at the Supreme Court of Canada.

2014: Quebec's National Assembly passed a law to allow medical aid in dying for adults in the province who are at the end of their lives, suffering from a serious and incurable illness and in an advanced state of irreversible decline. The law would take effect the following year.

2015: In a unanimous decision, the country's top court struck down two sections of the Criminal Code — the prohibition on aiding and abetting suicide and the section stating that no one can consent to have death inflicted on them.

The written decision stated it was "cruel" to deprive people of the ability to seek help from a physician to end their lives.

The Court ruled the laws violated the Section 7 Charter rights of "competent adults who seek such assistance as a result of a grievous and irremediable medical condition that causes enduring and intolerable suffering."

The Supreme Court invalidated the sections of the Criminal Code and gave Parliament one year to create a legal framework for assisted dying. The one-year grace period ended in February 2016.

2015: The Canadian Medical Association began developing training on medical assistance in dying for physicians.

In October, the Liberals won the federal election. Justin Trudeau's government asked the Supreme Court for a six-month extension to the deadline. The court granted four extra months, ending in June 2016.

2016: The House of Commons passed Bill C-14 in June, making it legal for doctors to help a person end their life if they had a terminal illness. The Senate tried to expand the right to die beyond those whose deaths were deemed "reasonably foreseeable," but members of Parliament voted against those amendments.

2019: The Superior Court of Quebec ruled that limiting MAID to people whose natural deaths were reasonably foreseeable was unconstitutional in a case involving two plaintiffs — Jean Truchon and Nicole Gladu — who were living with incurable and degenerative conditions.

The federal Liberal government and the Quebec government both chose not to appeal the decision.

2021: Parliament passed a law removing the requirement that a person's death had to be reasonably foreseeable, creating "track 1" and "track 2" MAID.

People whose deaths were not reasonably foreseeable — those in track 2 — had to meet additional eligibility criteria that included a 90-day assessment period and involvement of a practitioner with expertise in the condition causing the applicant's suffering.

In response to the Truchon case, the law allowed patients in some circumstances to waive final consent under an advance consent arrangement.

The law also excluded people whose sole underlying condition was a mental illness because of the complexity of those cases. The bill ordered an independent expert review to be done within a year. The exclusion covering cases of mental illness was set to last two years, until March 2023.

2022: The expert panel on MAID and mental illness made recommendations to Parliament that included developing MAID practice standards, requiring independent assessments and creating a model of prospective oversight.

2023: The Liberal government extended the exclusion for people with mental illness by one year to "provide additional time to prepare for the safe and consistent assessment and provision of MAID" and allow the government to consider a report from a special committee of MPs and senators studying MAID.

Quebec's National Assembly passed amendments to its own assisted dying laws to allow people to draft an advance request, which would come into force in the event that they lose capacity to request MAID.

2024: The government once again delayed eligibility for people whose sole underlying condition is a mental illness until March 2027.

2026: Another special committee of MPs and senators held hearings on the expansion of MAID to people with mental illness. It is expected to release a report on June 17.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

Teens face 1st degree murder charges in First Nations double homicide

Teens face 1st degree murder charges in First Nations double homicide
Prosecutors say two teens apprehended last week in connection with a double homicide in a First Nations community in northern Quebec are facing first-degree murder charges.

Teens face 1st degree murder charges in First Nations double homicide

Canadians sitting on $2 billion in uncashed federal cheques: documents

Canadians sitting on $2 billion in uncashed federal cheques: documents
Canadians have left some $2 billion in funds on the table by not cashing millions of paper cheques mailed out by federal government departments.

Canadians sitting on $2 billion in uncashed federal cheques: documents

Conservatives, Poilievre seek to carry convention momentum back into Parliament

Conservatives, Poilievre seek to carry convention momentum back into Parliament
Political analysts say the federal Conservatives and leader Pierre Poilievre have momentum coming off a unifying convention in Calgary but the party still has a hill to climb in Parliament to one-up Prime Minster Mark Carney and the Liberals.

Conservatives, Poilievre seek to carry convention momentum back into Parliament

Conservatives vote to keep Pierre Poilievre as leader after speech in Calgary

Conservatives vote to keep Pierre Poilievre as leader after speech in Calgary
Pierre Poilievre's position as Conservative leader was cemented Friday after 87.4 per cent of delegates voted in a mandatory leadership review to keep him at the helm of their party.

Conservatives vote to keep Pierre Poilievre as leader after speech in Calgary

Canada denied Jeffrey Epstein permission to visit B.C. in 2018: documents

Canada denied Jeffrey Epstein permission to visit B.C. in 2018: documents
The Canadian government denied convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein permission to enter the country in 2018 due to his criminal past, newly released U.S. government documents reveal.

Canada denied Jeffrey Epstein permission to visit B.C. in 2018: documents

Canadian man pleads guilty to sexually exploiting 100-plus girls in the United States

Canadian man pleads guilty to sexually exploiting 100-plus girls in the United States
A 40-year-old man from Toronto has pleaded guilty in the United States for sexually exploiting more than 100 children on social media.

Canadian man pleads guilty to sexually exploiting 100-plus girls in the United States