Pro-life cause up against Canadian law
By Michael Swan, The Catholic Register{mosimage}TORONTO - Pro-life lawyer Geoff Cauchi thinks it鱿鱼视频app a good thing Canada has no law on abortion.
鈥淚t鱿鱼视频app easier to get people motivated, to get them involved, when you show them, 鈥楲ook, there鱿鱼视频app no law; people could have an abortion right up to birth.鈥 They get shocked and they鈥檙e motivated,鈥 said Cauchi, who is on the boards of and .
In Cauchi鱿鱼视频app view the worst thing would be the sort of abortion law England and most European countries have 鈥 legal, funded abortion up to 26 weeks, with some legal restrictions on the relatively few late-term abortions.
The absence of any law restricting abortion in Canada is partly a political question and partly a reality of the law, said constitutional law professor Lorraine Weinrib of the University of Toronto.
In its 1988 Morgentaler decision, the Supreme Court of Canada invited Parliament to fashion a new law. Bill C-43 was passed, but when the Senate asked Weinrib whether this new law would pass muster under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms she told them no. The bill never became law.
While it may be possible to come up with a law regarding abortion, it鱿鱼视频app unlikely that such a law would make much difference to the reality of abortions in Canada, said Weinrib. Abortion rates in Canada have been declining since 1998 and fell by another 3.2 per cent between 2004 and 2005, according to the latest Statistics Canada data. However, there were still 96,815 induced abortions in Canada in 2005, or 14.1 for every 1,000 women between the ages of 15 and 44.
鈥淭here are imaginative ways to think about dealing with abortion as a problem, but probably not much prospect of restrictions that are legal and constitutional,鈥 said Weinrib.
Cauchi thinks there could and should be an abortion law with teeth.
鈥淎 lot of commentators say that no law that prohibited abortions would pass muster. But they鈥檙e forgetting that there is a notwithstanding clause,鈥 he said.
Even without using the controversial notwithstanding clause, Cauchi believes there could be an abortion law. The possibility is contained in the first paragraph of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, he said.
The charter 鈥済uarantees the rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.鈥 Cauchi believes banning abortion is a 鈥渞easonable limit鈥 which can be 鈥渄emonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.鈥
The precondition would be establishing in law that a fetus is a person.
鈥淣obody disagrees that one of the purposes of the government is to protect human beings from being killed,鈥 said Cauchi. 鈥淚f an unborn child was recognized as a person in law, then that would be a justifiable government purpose 鈥 to prevent a human being from being killed by another person, just like the laws against murder.鈥
Weinrib doesn鈥檛 think legal recognition of fetuses as persons is politically or legally likely in Canada. While legal recognition of unborn persons might change the American playing field that produced the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, it wouldn鈥檛 have the same effect in Canada, she said.
鈥淚t would be very hard under the charter regime for legislatures or Parliament to say the fetus is a person in a way that would produce different analysis as between the rights of the fetus and the rights of the woman,鈥 she said.
Cauchi doesn鈥檛 rate the immediate prospects of a law banning abortion very high.
鈥淚 think we have to change hearts first,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n the case of abortion I firmly believe 鈥 and it鱿鱼视频app just a personal opinion 鈥 that the law will change only when the people as a whole believe that it鱿鱼视频app wrong.鈥
The idea of the law as a teacher applies in most cases, but the history of abortion in Canada shows that governments can鈥檛 create a law where there is no societal consensus, said Cauchi.
Weinrib thinks the prospect of using criminal law to change people鱿鱼视频app behaviour around abortion is unlikely.
鈥淣either level of government, federal or provincial, has the power to impose moral teaching or faith-based teachings,鈥 she said. 鈥淚n a sense, the federal government is out of the business. It can鈥檛 do morality under the criminal law and it doesn鈥檛 have another possibility.鈥
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