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Politics

Conservative MP wants to know when life begins

A Conservative MP wants a special committee to look at when life begins, citing a Canadian law that he says limits it to birth.

Abortion debate will be reopened, opposition fears

MPs to debate when life begins?

13 years ago
Duration 2:14
Conservative MP Stephen Woodworth wants a committee of MPs to examine when life begins. The CBC's Julie Van Dusen probed the appetite for that debate among MPs on Parliament Hill on Monday.

A Conservative MP is calling for a special committee to examine when human life begins, a call opponents say is an excuse to reopen the debate over abortion.

Stephen Woodworth, who represents the Ontario riding ofKitchener Centre,has filed a motion in the House of Commons to form the committee. Woodworth saysCanadian law is based on a 400-year-old definition imported from Britain that says life is considered to start once a baby is born and no sooner.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has repeatedly said he doesn't want to reopen the debate, but his backbench MPs have so far been free to raise the issue.

It's wrong to accept a law that says some humanbeings are not human beings, Woodworth argued Monday morning.

"This story has to do with one parliamentarian's belief that justice demandshonest laws based on cogent evidence and principle," he said.

"It's simply not legitimatenot even to achieve some important or desired result for Parliament to accept alaw that says that some human beings are not human beings when they are. That's a misrepresentation that prevents us from even having an honest conversation about it."

Government says won't reopen debate

Justice Minister Rob Nicholson released a terse statementbefore Woodworth'snews conference finished.

"Private member's motions are considered in accordance with the rules of Parliament," the two-line statement said. "The prime minister has been very clear [that] our government will not reopen this debate."

Woodworth has called for a debate on the issue in the past and says it'sseparate from the debate over abortion.

"They do intersect but there are many questions which are not common to them both," he said.

"Once we decidewhether or nota child is a human being before birth, then we can have an honest conversation about all of the other issues."

Responding toa 2008 election survey by Campaign Life Coalition, an anti-abortion group, Woodworth said he believes life begins at conception and sees no circumstances under which abortions should be performed.

No legal restrictions on abortion

Canada has had no legal restrictions on abortion since 1988, when the Supreme Court struck down a law limiting the procedure. The Canadian Medical Association issues guidelines on abortion that consider the viability of the fetus. The CMA says its position is that there is no need to replace the law struck down in 1988.

Opposition MPs say it's clear Woodworth is trying to reopen the debate.

Interim NDP Leader Nycole Turmel said the discussion over when human life begins is very close to the debate on abortion.

"It was dealt with years ago, the right of women to control her body."

Turmel said Harper should instruct Woodworth to withdraw the motion if has control of his caucus and isserious about not wanting to reopen the abortion debate.

Interim Liberal Leader Bob Rae said Woodworth is effectively starting up the abortion debate.

"When[the motion]comes for a debate, there will be a debate, clearly, on the question of abortion," he said. "But each member of the chamber has the right to bring private initiatives."

"I think there is a goodmajorityof the chamber who won't vote for it."

Woodworth expects hismotion to get an hour of debate in March and another hour in June.

It's not clear whether the motion would pass. The NDP, Liberals and Bloc are likely to vote against it. But while private members' business is usually given free votes,Harpercould whip his cabinet members, forcing them to vote against it and likely denyingthe motionenough support to pass.

Abortion has come up twice in the past year, including during the last federal election campaign when Saskatoon MPBrad Trost told an anti-abortion groupthat the government was denying funding to the International Planned Parenthood Federationdue to their lobbying efforts.

Itarose again when International Co-operation Minister Bev Oda approved funding for the federation. Trost and fellow SaskatchewanConservative MP Maurice Vellacott spoke out against the decision.