Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Senate passes conversion therapy ban

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Dec, 2021 05:12 PM
  • Senate passes conversion therapy ban

OTTAWA - The Senate gave speedy approval Tuesday to legislation banning conversion therapy in Canada.

After minimal debate, senators agreed to fast-track Bill C-4 through all stages of the legislative process and deem it passed.

The move was proposed by the interim leader of the Conservative Senate caucus, Sen. Leo Housakos.

It followed a similar move by Conservatives in the House of Commons last week to speed the bill through that chamber without lengthy debate, committee study or votes.

The bill is expected to receive royal assent as early as Wednesday.

The bill makes it a criminal offence to force a person to undergo the traumatizing practice of "conversion therapy" aimed at altering their sexual orientation or gender identity.

More than half of the 119 Conservative MPs voted against a similar bill last June, which gave Liberals ammunition to accuse the party of being anti-LGBTQ during the fall election campaign.

That bill did not make it through the Senate before it rose for the summer and it eventually died when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called an election in August.

Some Conservative MPs sat stone-faced last week while other colleagues celebrated the swift passage of the new bill through the Commons. But in moving to pass it without debate or a vote in both parliamentary chambers, leader Erin O'Toole is hoping to neutralize the issue as a wedge that can be used against his party in future.

"The Trudeau government has been using LGBTQ2S Canadians as political pawns and conversion therapy as a political weapon. Long enough," Housakos tweeted Tuesday shortly after the Senate passed the new bill.

"That’s why today we gave the govt a clear path forward in banning conversion therapy."

The new bill goes further than the original, banning conversion therapy for consenting adults, as well as for children and non-consenting adults.

It creates four new Criminal Code offences: causing a person to undergo conversion therapy, subjecting a minor to conversion therapy abroad, profiting from the provision of conversion therapy and advertising or promoting the practice, with penalties of two to five years in prison.

In moving Tuesday to pass the bill immediately in the Senate, Housakos told senators that no Canadians "deserve to be treated as political props or for political expediency. That's not the Canadian way."

When something is in "the universal public interest." he added that the Senate should "not create unnecessary duplication and engage in unnecessary debates."

There were no dissenting voices to Housakos's motion and the bill was thus passed, to applause from senators.

“With the unanimous passage of Bill C-4, all senators stood shoulder to shoulder with the House of Commons in the defense of human rights and Canada’s LGBTQ2 community,” Sen. Marc Gold, the government representative in the Senate, said in a statement.

However, Campaign Life Coalition, an anti-abortion group that has had considerable influence in the Conservative party, condemned passage of the bill.

Coalition president Jeff Gunnarson asserted in a statement that the legislation will make it illegal for parents or religious leaders to counsel "gender-confused" children — a charge the government has denied. And he predicted the ban on consenting adults receiving conversion therapy will be struck down as unconstitutional.

“Banning consenting adults from voluntarily obtaining the kind of clinical therapy, psychoanalysis, or spiritual counselling that they desire for themselves is simply unconstitutional," Gunnarson said.

"We hope that individuals who no longer wish to identify as LGBT and who want to voluntarily avail themselves of these supports will sue the government and ask the court to strike down the law.”

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Gas rationing continues for now in B.C.: minister

Gas rationing continues for now in B.C.: minister
Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth says the lifting of the provincial 30-litre purchase order will occur as soon as the pipeline system is able resume full service, but until then, fuel limits will remain in place until Dec. 14.

Gas rationing continues for now in B.C.: minister

Body found in burned out vehicle in Abbotsford, IHIT investigating

Body found in burned out vehicle in Abbotsford, IHIT investigating
Upon the fire being extinguished by Abbotsford Fire Rescue Service, human remains were located within the vehicle. Abbotsford Police Patrol Officers, Major Crime Detectives, and the Forensic Identification Unit remain on the scene. Officers are in the initial stages of this investigation and there are no further details at this time.

Body found in burned out vehicle in Abbotsford, IHIT investigating

Cracks in Cyclones could be linked to folding tail

Cracks in Cyclones could be linked to folding tail
Unlike the CH-148 Cyclone, the S-92 does not have a folding tail boom, a feature that allows the Cyclone to fit inside the small hangars aboard Canada's fleet of Halifax-class frigates.

Cracks in Cyclones could be linked to folding tail

Deportation decision delayed in Broncos case

Deportation decision delayed in Broncos case
A lawyer for Jaskirat Singh Sidhu, 33, had sent a voluminous amount of paperwork to the Canada Border Services Agency earlier this year arguing why he should be allowed to stay in Canada once his sentence has been served. Sidhu was sentenced to eight years after pleading guilty to dangerous driving causing death and bodily harm in the April 2018 collision that killed 16 people and injured 13.    

Deportation decision delayed in Broncos case

Metro Vancouver has its first snowfall, Air Canada warns of flight disruptions

Metro Vancouver has its first snowfall, Air Canada warns of flight disruptions
Metro Vancouver residents woke up to the first snowfall of the season on Monday. As the flurries were falling, Air Canada gave aheads up to all travellers to give themselves plenty of time as the snow might cause flight disruptions. 

Metro Vancouver has its first snowfall, Air Canada warns of flight disruptions

Liberals set to introduce changes to drug laws

Liberals set to introduce changes to drug laws
The federal Liberals are expected to introduce a bill in the House of Commons today that would revive a legislative push to repeal mandatory minimum penalties for drug offences. On Friday the government gave the House of Commons a procedural heads-up that a bill to amend the Criminal Code and federal drug laws would be introduced on Monday.

Liberals set to introduce changes to drug laws