Joan Bryden
Reporter for The Canadian Press
About Joan Bryden
Senate passes revised version of assisted-dying bill
Senators overwhelmingly approved on Wednesday, February 17, 2021, a bill to expand access to medical assistance in dying with amendments that would relax access even more than proposed by the government.
Senators demand race-based data on Canadian MAID requests
Senators want the federal government to collect race-based data on who requests and receives medical assistance in dying in Canada.
Trend toward assisted dying for non-terminal conditions alarms UN experts
United Nations human rights experts are alarmed by what they see as a growing trend to enact legislation allowing medical assistance in dying for people suffering from non-terminal, disabling conditions.
Despite doubts about effectiveness, most people strongly support COVID-19 curfews, poll shows
Almost two-thirds of Canadians would support a nightly curfew if necessary to curb the spread of COVID-19 — even though they're not convinced it would be effective, a new poll suggests.
Prime Minister Trudeau reflects on difficult year
Justin Trudeau always knew 2020 was going to be a difficult year, his first leading a minority Liberal government dependent on opposition party support for its survival.
Provinces that don't agree to improve long-term care standards risk losing funding, PM hints
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is hinting that provinces that don't want to work with Ottawa to improve standards in long-term care homes won't get federal funding.
Constitutional challenges to MAID bill inevitable, senator explains
The government's representative in the Senate concedes it's possible that a bill to expand access to medically assisted dying may be struck down as unconstitutional by the courts.
Commons passes bill to expand assisted dying after Conservatives end filibuster
A bill to expand access to medical assistance in dying was approved on Thursday, December 10, 2020, by the House of Commons after the Conservatives ended a days-long filibuster.
Premiers' demands for long-term health funding take backseat to pandemic
A first ministers meeting on Dec. 10 that was supposed to be devoted to long-term, federal health care funding seems destined to be hijacked by a more urgent priority: surviving the COVID-19 pandemic.
Conservatives prepared to talk out the clock on assisted dying bill: O'Toole
Many people will suffer needlessly if Conservatives continue filibustering a bill on medically assisted dying beyond a court-imposed deadline of Dec. 18, Justice Minister David Lametti said Tuesday.