Canadian law reformers promise tolerance, freedom of conscience
What happens after the law is changed is another story.
Sean Murphy*
Now let me finally cut to the chase, to the heart of this appeal. The most vociferous opposition to our challenge comes from some church groups, and some disabled organizations. To the church groups we simply say that we respect your religious views, but they cannot, in this secular society, trump our clients’ constitutional rights. And no one is suggesting that a physician who has a religious objection to assisting a patient with his or her death must do so.
Joseph Arvay, Q.C., Oral Submission to the Supreme Court of Canada, Carter v. Canada, 15 October, 2014
Introduction
With the passage of the Quebec euthanasia law and the pending decision in Carter v. Canada in the Supreme Court of Canada, physicians, medical students, nurses and other health care workers opposed to euthanasia and assisted suicide for reasons of conscience are confronted by the prospect that laws against the procedures will be struck down or changed. They may wonder what the future holds for them if that happens.
Will they be forced to provide or assist with something they find morally abhorrent? If they refuse to do so, will they be disadvantaged, discriminated against, disciplined, sued or fired? Will they be forced out of their specialty or profession, or forced to emigrate if they wish to continue in it?
The realpolitik of law reform
These questions have been largely ignored, since much of the public debate about euthanasia and assisted suicide has been about whether or not the procedures should be legalized, not about what effect legalization might have on freedom of conscience, particularly among health care workers. Opponents of legalization understandably decline to raise the issue because they are concerned that doing so would compromise the message they want to deliver.
Advocates of legalization, on the other hand, generally recognize that support for euthanasia and assisted suicide may begin to evaporate if it appears that they intend to force unwilling physicians or health care workers to participate in killing patients. In particular, they do not wish to alienate members of the health care community who, on principle or as a matter of prudent self-interest, would not support such a coercive policy. Instead, they adopt a reassuring posture of respect for freedom of conscience and tolerance for opposing views within the medical profession.
It is instructive to see how this strategy has been applied in the case of the Quebec euthanasia law and the Carter case, and then to consider how it was applied in the case abortion, another morally controversial procedure. While we cannot predict the future, we are now in a position to judge the worth of the assurances given when abortion was legalized over forty years ago, and to apply that judgement to assurances now being made about euthanasia. [Full Text]