Brantford Expositor e-edition

PM pledges to defend abortion rights around the world

Abortion access in Canada is not protected by law or Charter of Rights

MARIE-DANIELLE SMITH

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is promising to defend abortion rights in Canada and around the world after what he calls a “devastating setback” in the United States.

He and Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly reacted Friday to the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to overturn its 50-year-old Roe v. Wade ruling that had guaranteed countrywide access to abortion.

“It shows how much standing up and fighting for rights matters every day, that we can't take anything for granted, that we need to continue to stand strong and defend everybody's rights and freedoms,” said Trudeau, speaking in Kigali, Rwanda, where he and the minister are attending a Commonwealth summit.

He said his government will defend abortion access in Canada and internationally, including by fighting for women's rights in Africa and supporting people fighting for their rights in the United States.

Joly called it a “dark day.”

“It's a reversal of hard-fought gains by generations of women and this decision will put women's lives at risk and it has a domino effect on other rights,” she said.

She added no country in the world is immune to what is going on in the United States, noting that a majority of Conservatives voted in favour of a private member's bill last year to outlaw so-called sex-selective abortions. The bill was defeated.

Joly also accused Conservative leadership candidates of “shopping for anti-abortion votes.”

The Liberals will work across the government to ensure that women across Canada and the world have access to sexual and reproductive health services, she said.

Candice Bergen, the Conservative party's interim leader, accused the Liberals of politicizing the abortion issue to create division among Canadians.

She said in a statement that her party's position on abortion has not changed and the Conservatives “will not introduce legislation or reopen the abortion debate.”

Leslyn Lewis, a candidate in the party's leadership race who describes herself as “pro-life,” tweeted Friday that “Canada is not the U.S.” and she expects Canadians to be able to have adult conversations about the topic.

She said her position is that coercive and sex-selective abortions are wrong, and a Conservative party under her leadership would allow free votes for issues of conscience in the House of Commons.

The Campaign Life Coalition, which holds an annual anti-abortion rally on Parliament Hill that attracts thousands and has supported Lewis's candidacy, put out a statement praising the court: “We thank God and heartily applaud this decision.”

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said in a statement Friday morning that the court had “walked back women's rights” by effectively making abortion illegal in many states.

“These dangerous policies that threaten women's health and women's lives must not be allowed to take root in Canada,” the statement reads, with Singh demanding that

Liberals work to improve abortion access for women in rural communities.

The right to an abortion doesn't exist in Canada in the same way it was enshrined in Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 decision that had served as a rock-ribbed legal scaffold for reproductive rights champions around the world for nearly half a century.

Abortion is decriminalized in Canada because of a 1988 Supreme Court decision, but no bill has ever been passed to enshrine access into law and it's also not considered a constitutionally protected right under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Though the decision is sending “shock waves” across the world, the legal ability to have an abortion in Canada is not under threat, said Joyce Arthur, executive director of the Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada.

But her organization is concerned about Americans coming north for abortion care and is advocating for federal and provincial governments to help clinics with more funding because, as Arthur puts it, “even a small number of Americans can overwhelm our system.”

The Canadian Civil Liberties Association is “deeply troubled” by the decision and the laws that state legislators may be emboldened to pass in its wake, one of its directors, Cara Zwibel, said in a statement.

CANADA

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2022-06-25T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-06-25T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://eeditionbrantfordexpositor.pressreader.com/article/281651078788492

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