Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

.joint Committee On Doctor-assisted Suicide Dying Sets First Meeting For Monday

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jan, 2016 01:20 PM
    OTTAWA — The joint parliamentary committee that's examining the divisive issue of doctor-assisted death has scheduled its first meeting for next Monday.
     
    A list of 11 MPs who will sit on the panel was released today.
     
    The MPs include six Liberals, three Conservatives and two New Democrats, all of whom will join five senators on the panel who were named earlier.
     
    Three of the senators are Conservatives and two are independent Liberals.
     
    The panel is to consult Canadians on how to bring in a new law on assisted dying that addresses the constitutional issues raised in a landmark Supreme Court of Canada ruling last year.
     
    The court recognized the right of consenting adults enduring intolerable physical or mental suffering to end their lives with a doctor's help.
     
    It suspended its decision for a year to give Parliament a chance to figure out how to respond to the ruling. The government has asked for a six-month extension on that deadline, which is just over three weeks away.
     
    The panel includes several rookie MPs, a former Conservative cabinet minister and a veteran New Democrat.
     
    One of the Conservatives, B.C. MP Mark Warawa, sparked a controversy in the last Parliament when he proposed a motion deploring sex-selective abortions — a move some saw as a veiled effort to re-open the abortion debate.
     
    The motion never came to a vote, leaving a bitter Warawa to complain that he was being muzzled by his own party.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Accused Of Killing Teenager Tina Fontaine Waives Court Appearance

    Man Accused Of Killing Teenager Tina Fontaine Waives Court Appearance
    WINNIPEG — The case of a man accused of killing 15-year-old Manitoba girl Tina Fontaine will not be back in court until after the holidays.

    Man Accused Of Killing Teenager Tina Fontaine Waives Court Appearance

    Alberta Taxpayers' Federation Lists Who's Been Naughty, Who's Been Nice

    Alberta Taxpayers' Federation Lists Who's Been Naughty, Who's Been Nice
    The CTF has released its annual "Taxpayer Naughty and Nice List," targetting those politicians who misuse tax dollars but also those who put taxpayers first.

    Alberta Taxpayers' Federation Lists Who's Been Naughty, Who's Been Nice

    Mike Duffy Says He Resisted Harper PMO Scenario For Repaying Expenses

    Mike Duffy Says He Resisted Harper PMO Scenario For Repaying Expenses
    OTTAWA — Sen. Mike Duffy says he resisted "at every opportunity" a scenario laid out for him by the former Prime Minister's Office to tell the public he had made a mistake and was repaying his Senate expenses.

    Mike Duffy Says He Resisted Harper PMO Scenario For Repaying Expenses

    Kathleen Wynne To Apologize For 1912 Regulation Banning French In Ontario Primary Schools

    TORONTO — Premier Kathleen Wynne is willing to apologize to Ontario Francophones for a 1912 regulation that prohibited teachers in elementary schools from speaking with students in French.

    Kathleen Wynne To Apologize For 1912 Regulation Banning French In Ontario Primary Schools

    BMO Report Suggests Canadian Drivers Not Reaping Full Benefit Of Lower Oil

    BMO Report Suggests Canadian Drivers Not Reaping Full Benefit Of Lower Oil
    TORONTO — A report by the Bank of Montreal suggests Canadian drivers aren't reaping the full benefit of lower oil prices when it comes to prices at the pump.

    BMO Report Suggests Canadian Drivers Not Reaping Full Benefit Of Lower Oil

    A Year Of Tough Choices Ahead In Defence For Justin Trudeau's Liberals

    A Year Of Tough Choices Ahead In Defence For Justin Trudeau's Liberals
     Harjit Sajjan, Canada's new defence minister, is uniquely qualified to know how Ottawa's abstract policy decisions can be bent, twisted and mangled in the far-flung corners of the globe — sometimes to the detriment of those in uniform.

    A Year Of Tough Choices Ahead In Defence For Justin Trudeau's Liberals