Hébert (i see some of you like her stuff, so um...)
holy moly.
By putting forward a process that gives the Liberal majority control over the outcome of the consultations on Bill C-14, the government had succeeded in uniting against it opposition parties that otherwise bring opposite views to the debate, writes Chantal Hébert.
Looking back on the debacle that attended the latest episode in the assisted-death debate in the House of Commons this week, it is easy to forget that Justin Trudeau’s government had a parliamentary consensus within its grasp when it set out to draft its now-contentious bill.
Earlier this year a committee of MPs and senators charted a roadmap that had the dual merit of meeting the constitutional threshold set by the Supreme Court and of enjoying multi-party support in both houses of Parliament.
Its members did not expect the government to accept all their recommendations. They did not think their proposal to give access to assisted death to mature minors would make it into the bill. But few imagined that the cabinet would take a sledgehammer to the foundation they had laid out.
In the end, Bill C-14 borrows more from the restrictive minority report drafted by the Conservative MPs on the committee than from the majority recommendations.
mo
https://www.thestar.com/news/canada...-the-ham-fisted-liberal-government-hbert.html
holy moly.
By putting forward a process that gives the Liberal majority control over the outcome of the consultations on Bill C-14, the government had succeeded in uniting against it opposition parties that otherwise bring opposite views to the debate, writes Chantal Hébert.
Looking back on the debacle that attended the latest episode in the assisted-death debate in the House of Commons this week, it is easy to forget that Justin Trudeau’s government had a parliamentary consensus within its grasp when it set out to draft its now-contentious bill.
Earlier this year a committee of MPs and senators charted a roadmap that had the dual merit of meeting the constitutional threshold set by the Supreme Court and of enjoying multi-party support in both houses of Parliament.
Its members did not expect the government to accept all their recommendations. They did not think their proposal to give access to assisted death to mature minors would make it into the bill. But few imagined that the cabinet would take a sledgehammer to the foundation they had laid out.
In the end, Bill C-14 borrows more from the restrictive minority report drafted by the Conservative MPs on the committee than from the majority recommendations.
mo
https://www.thestar.com/news/canada...-the-ham-fisted-liberal-government-hbert.html