Tuesday, February 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Senators seek to spur national debate on assisted suicide with proposed new law

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Dec, 2014 10:56 AM

    OTTAWA — Thwarted in his efforts to force the House of Commons to debate the issue of assisted suicide, Manitoba Conservative MP Stephen Fletcher has gone down the hall for some help.

    Two senators — one a Conservative, the other a Liberal — are taking over Fletcher's bid to make physician-assisted death legal under Canadian law, introducing a bill on the subject in the upper chamber.

    It's an opportunity to spark a national debate on the contentious question — and also a chance for the Senate to burnish its tarnished reputation, Fletcher told a news conference Tuesday.

    "This is an opportunity in fact for the Senate to shine, to demonstrate why the Senate is there," said Fletcher, who became a quadriplegic after a car accident in 1996.

    "They are dealing with an issue that obviously most elected representatives do not want to deal with. Moreover, I think the mere fact that it's now going to be debated in Parliament will increase public awareness, people will have this discussion with their families around the dinner table, which will prevent a lot of heartache in the future for those families."

    Conservative Sen. Nancy Ruth is introducing the bill with the support of Liberal-appointed senator Larry Campbell. Both say they believe their parties will help move it forward.

    "If you know Sen. Nancy Ruth and myself, we don't fight on hills we don't think we can take," Campbell said.

    Ruth said her aim to have it passed through the Senate by spring and then handed over to the House of Commons.

    It's possible that the Supreme Court, which is currently studying the constitutionality of the existing ban on assisted suicide, will have weighed in on the issue by then.

    But there is only so far the court will be able to go, said Dr. James Downar, who is on the advisory board for the advocacy group Dying with Dignity.

    "Ultimately the Supreme Court can only strike down a bad law," Downar said.

    "It cannot write a good law, it cannot create the safeguards needed, it can't create the oversight needed and it cannot provide the funding required to improve end of life care for all Canadians."

    An online poll conducted for the group in August ahead of the Supreme Court hearing found a significant majority of respondents in favour of allowing a doctor to help end a person's life, in certain circumstances.

    The bill being put forward in the Senate would impose strict guidelines on those circumstances and how a request for assistance would be approved.

    Among other things, it would impose a 14-day waiting period between a request being made and a doctor carrying it out.

    "This bill is fundamentally about choice," Ruth said.

    "It doesn't coerce anybody — not a physician, not a patient, not a family member, nobody. It is simply to provide a choice, another choice for Canadians, in how they choose to end their lives."

    The national association for Canadian doctors recently backed down from its long-standing opposition to against assisted death.

    In August, the Canadian Medical Association changed its official policy to say it supports the idea of physicians — within the bounds of existing laws — following their conscience when asked to provide aid in dying.

    Ruth said she wants to see the CMA take that discussion even further.

    "The CMA is moving and this is exciting so the Senate is a good place for them to talk," she said. "And senators are close enough to death to want to do this."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Jury in first-degree murder trial of Luka Rocco Magnotta sent home until Tuesday

    Jury in first-degree murder trial of Luka Rocco Magnotta sent home until Tuesday
    MONTREAL — Jurors at Luka Rocco Magnotta's first-degree murder trial have been sent home until Tuesday morning.

    Jury in first-degree murder trial of Luka Rocco Magnotta sent home until Tuesday

    Crew member expected to testify at murder trial of fisherman in Cape Breton

    Crew member expected to testify at murder trial of fisherman in Cape Breton
    PORT HAWKESBURY, N.S. — The trial of a Nova Scotia man charged in the death of a lobster fisherman whose body has never been found is expected to resume today.

    Crew member expected to testify at murder trial of fisherman in Cape Breton

    Woman Found Dead In A Surrey Home, Husband Is In Police Custody

    Woman Found Dead In A Surrey Home, Husband Is In Police Custody
    taff Sgt. Jennifer Pound of the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says Mounties were called to the home (in the 6900 block of 152 St.) yesterday afternoon and found the woman's body.

    Woman Found Dead In A Surrey Home, Husband Is In Police Custody

    New Brunswick premier says Ontario's conditions for Energy East are reasonable

    New Brunswick premier says Ontario's conditions for Energy East are reasonable
    TORONTO — Conditions that Ontario wants met for its support of the proposed Energy East Pipeline from Alberta to the East Coast won't hinder the project, says New Brunswick Premier Brian Gallant.

    New Brunswick premier says Ontario's conditions for Energy East are reasonable

    Nova Scotia man granted bail in possible case of wrongful murder conviction

    Nova Scotia man granted bail in possible case of wrongful murder conviction
    HALIFAX — A Nova Scotia man whose life sentence may have been the result of a wrongful murder conviction has been granted bail.

    Nova Scotia man granted bail in possible case of wrongful murder conviction

    Second young man accused in prominent child porn case in Halifax pleads guilty

    Second young man accused in prominent child porn case in Halifax pleads guilty
    HALIFAX — A second young man accused in a prominent child pornography case in Halifax has pleaded guilty.

    Second young man accused in prominent child porn case in Halifax pleads guilty