Close X
Monday, December 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Poilievre says he's opposed to using puberty blockers to treat young people

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Feb, 2024 11:03 AM
  • Poilievre says he's opposed to using puberty blockers to treat young people

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre confirmed Wednesday that he's opposed to allowing the use of puberty blockers on children.

Poilievre made the comment during a barrage of media questions about his views on gender-affirming medical treatments for transgender youth. 

Puberty blockers, as they're known, are used to prevent the body from producing the sex hormones that fuel both male and female development. 

"We should protect children and their ability to make adult decisions when they're adults," Poilievre said.

When asked directly whether he opposes the use of puberty blockers for gender-diverse youth under the age of 18, he said, "Yes."  

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith announced plans last week to ban puberty blockers and hormone therapy for children 15 and younger who have not already begun such treatments.

That spurred protests in Alberta and Ottawa and drew condemnation from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who accuses Smith of pushing an anti-LGBTQ+ agenda. 

For months, Poilievre has said he supports the rights of parents to raise their children as they wish, and urged Trudeau to "butt out" of provincial decisions about schools and hospitals.

On Wednesday, he accused the prime minister of launching attacks against families "who are trying to protect their kids." 

"He will, in the end, back down on this," Poilievre suggested.

Liberal cabinet minister Randy Boissonnault, an openly gay MP who represents an Edmonton riding, paused before the party's weekly caucus meeting Wednesday to deride Poilievre's position. 

The decision to use puberty blockers should be based on a conversation between a young person and their doctor, Boissonnault said. 

"I don't see M.D. after Pierre Poilievre's name or Danielle Smith's," he said. "So, not their business."

Since becoming leader, Poilievre has tried to keep the Conservatives' focus on cost-of-living issues and crime, which the party sees as winning messages.

Some of his supporters, however, have pressed him to veer further into the debate around how schools handle issues of gender diversity and sexual orientation among their students. 

At last year's policy convention in Quebec City, party grassroots voted overwhelmingly in favour of a resolution that calls on a future Conservative government to prohibit "medicinal or surgical interventions" for gender-diverse and transgender children. 

Poilievre has yet to say whether he accepts that resolution or has any plans to ink it into a future election platform. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Driver killed after car plunged from second floor of UBC parkade building

Driver killed after car plunged from second floor of UBC parkade building
Police have confirmed the driver of a car that plunged off the second floor of a multi-storey parkade building at the University of British Columbia was killed in the crash. RCMP say the male driver of the vehicle was pronounced dead at the scene Wednesday after his car crashed through a concrete wall and landed at ground level.    

Driver killed after car plunged from second floor of UBC parkade building

Body found in Chilliwack home

Body found in Chilliwack home
B-C's Integrated Homicide Investigation Unit says officers were deployed to a Chilliwack home yesterday after a 66-year-old woman was found dead. It says officers also found a 37-year old man suffering non-life-threatening injuries and a 68-year-old man was arrested at the scene.

Body found in Chilliwack home

All Vancouver, Fraser Valley schools shut for second day as winter weather persists

All Vancouver, Fraser Valley schools shut for second day as winter weather persists
All public schools in Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley are shut for a second day, with more winter weather expected a day after a snowstorm caused havoc in southern British Columbia. Post-secondary institutions in the region such as the University of B.C., Simon Fraser University, the B.C. Institute of Technology and Kwantlen Polytechnic University have also cancelled all in-person classes again.

All Vancouver, Fraser Valley schools shut for second day as winter weather persists

Softwood spat due to housing shortage

Softwood spat due to housing shortage
Canada's international trade minister says the great North American softwood lumber standoff is putting a drag on the continent's already tight housing supply. Mary Ng says Ottawa will contest the U.S. International Trade Commission's latest decision to maintain "unjustified" duties on imports of Canadian softwood. 

Softwood spat due to housing shortage

Woman stabbed in Surrey

Woman stabbed in Surrey
Mounties in Surrey say they need help in finding a man who stabbed a woman. Police say the report came in last night of an attack on the woman by an unknown male.

Woman stabbed in Surrey

B.C.'s $36-billion hydro plan opens clean power economic opportunities, says premier

B.C.'s $36-billion hydro plan opens clean power economic opportunities, says premier
Premier David Eby says a planned 10-year, $36 billion expansion of British Columbia's electrical system will open economic opportunities and ensure ample power to supply the province's growing population. It's a 50 per cent increase in capital project investments by BC Hydro, the province's public energy utility, which Eby says will focus on increasing electrification and operations that reduce emissions across the province.

B.C.'s $36-billion hydro plan opens clean power economic opportunities, says premier