The publication of Policy on a possible ban on abortion in the United States by the Supreme Court of that country has had an impact in Canada. A document – leaked to US media – showed that a conservative majority in the highest court plans to cancel a right enshrined since 1973after the judgment of the case Roe vs. Wade. The northern neighbor offers itself as a kind of sanctuary if the ban is finally carried out. For its part, the Canadian political class has closed ranks on the issue by defending the right of women to decide about their bodies, with the exception of the Conservative Party.
Karina Gould, Federal Minister for Family and Social Development, said on the show on Tuesday power and politics chain Radio Canada that American women will be able to have access to abortion in the event that the Supreme Court of their country decrees a ban on it. “I don’t see why we wouldn’t. If they come here and need it, that’s definitely a service that could be offered,” he said.
Women who do not live in Canada have access to voluntary termination of pregnancy, but they have to pay for it (unlike Canadians and residents, since it’s provided for in the country’s public and free system), unless they have private insurance. If the judges finally decide to repeal Roe vs. Wade, as the draft suggests, the court would return the right to legislate termination of pregnancy to each of the 50 states of the Union. And this could increase the demands for this service in the neighboring country.
“A very troubling factor is that many Canadians don’t live near a major city in Canada, but have access to abortion in the United States,” Gould said. The Minister said she was very distressed by the publication of Policy. “I am very concerned about all that this represents, particularly for Americans, but also for Canadians,” she added.
This Wednesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said his government was studying to strengthen the legal framework related to the right to abortion. It’s a Liberal campaign promise that re-emerged forcefully after the news from the United States. A fundamental problem is that some provinces have a limited number of clinics and hospitals where this service is offered. Trudeau said the key is to “ensure that, not just now, but under any government in the future, women’s rights are well protected.”
The day before, Trudeau had insisted on Twitter to defend abortion as a women’s right. “The right to choose is a woman’s right, period. All women in Canada have the right to a safe and legal abortion. We will never stop protecting and promoting the rights of women in Canada and around the world,” she wrote. Liberal parliamentarians supported their leader’s remarks. Jagmeet Singh, leader of the New Democratic Party, expressed concern about reports from the United States. “When abortion is banned, the result is that there are women who die,” he said. The Bloc Québécois was also pointing in the same direction.
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The Conservative Party did not take a position, even if it was a surprise fact. The newspaper The Globe and Mail published that the management of this group had sent a message to their deputies asking them not to comment on the case. Abortion was a criminal act in Canada until 1988, when the country’s Supreme Court declared the provision unconstitutional. The right of women to have access to this health service has been consolidated over time, although some conservative politicians have sometimes called for reopening the debate on this issue.
Conservative Party members will elect a new leader in September; Candice Bergen has been in charge since last February. Despite the request of the management of do not comment on abortion issue, two of the candidates have made it clear that a government they lead will never present or support a plan to limit this right. They are MP Pierre Poilievre and Jean Charest, former premier of Quebec.
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