A bill to make "injuring or causing the death of an unborn child while committing an offence" a criminal offence subject to the same punishment as murder was given second reading this week.
Zzzzzz, you say, old news. Where now?
Well, there's the surprise.
Canada. (Where criminal law is federal, so this happened in the House of Commons.)
http://www.thestar.com/living/article/310182It should not be lost on anybody that the party with the fewest number of women MPs in the House of Commons voted overwhelmingly in favour of Bill C-484 on Wednesday.
It passed 147-133, with one lone woman Opposition MP – Liberal member Albina Guarnieri – voting yea. Even the Bloc Québécois' Raymond Gravel, a Roman Catholic priest, rejected it.
The Star doesn't mention that another opposition member, one lone member of my own New Democratic Party, voted for it. My party leader declined to "whip the vote", i.e. require caucus members to vote party line or be expelled. Sad. Appalling.
"This is all about protecting the choice of a woman to give birth to her child," said Epp <the Conservative turd who authored the bill> last fall. "It is about condemning the actions of those who would take it upon themselves to criminally assault a pregnant woman and the child she wants and loves."
So how about a bill protecting all women from abusive partners, with the money and the muscle to back it up, instead? Or is that too much for a government that shut down mechanisms through which women can sue for equality?
Epp says it's "all about choice". Anti-choice organizations say, unhesitatingly and clearly, that it's all about a first step on the road to denying choice.
The Star is referring to the Conservative government's cancellation of the Court Challenges Program, which many individuals and minority groups -- same-sex couples challenging the marriage prohibition, Francophone minorities challenging French-language hospital closings, women challenging all sorts of things -- have used to exercise their constitutional equality rights against discriminatory legislation.
Odd how the two things have coincided. The Prime Minister voted for this bill. Odd how only a tiny, tiny minority of private member's bills ever even make it to the floor of the house, let alone pass first reading (approval in principle allowing it to proceed for study) or pass second reading (referral to committee for debate, possible amendment and referral back to the House), but this one did.
It's unlikely that it would pass third reading, i.e. become law. We hope. Especially since we're pretty much expecting an election to be called in the near future, if the Conservatives manage to goad the Liberals into defeating one of their many obnoxious initiatives so the Conservatives can call an election nobody else wants and aim for a majority government. Then I guess it would come back. And pass.
There's virtually no chance the Supreme Court would uphold that law, if anyone convicted under it challenged it. It's a violation of so much stuff in the constitution it wouldn't have a hope. The right to equality before and under the law, for starters: quite apart from the entire fetuses-have-rights nonsense, you just don't go calling something "murder" and imposing life sentences for it when it isn't murder. Hell, why not call shop-lifting murder?
Anyhow, just thought you'd all like to know what we're up to, up here under 16 feet of snow and the two more feet we're expecting this weekend. ;)