Blog – Libby Davies yeehaw

DRUG SAFETY BILL A STEP IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION

DRUG SAFETY BILL A STEP IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

December 6, 2013

OTTAWA – After years of urging the government to take action to ensure the safety of prescription drugs in Canada, New Democrats welcome new safety measures.

“The NDP has long proposed ways to ensure better drug safety and we are pleased to see a bill that incorporates some of these ideas,” said NDP Health critic Libby Davies (Vancouver East). “We plan to study the details closely and engage with Canadians as we work to strengthen the bill.”

Bill C-17 includes a key NDP proposal which empowers Health Canada to issue drug recall orders and compel distributors to remedy any problems with prescription drugs. There are also stiffer fines and even the possibility of jail time for distributors who fail to withdraw unsafe products from the market. However, the bill is missing critical measures to improve reporting and communications about adverse reactions from physicians and pharmacies, and ensuring that information gets to the public in a timely manner. 

“While this bill is a good start, unfortunately it looks like the Minister has missed an opportunity to increase drug safety in a comprehensive way,” said Davies. “Today I think many are wondering why she didn’t go further.”


Paul Martin, Architect of Social Inequality? Yes, Says MP Davies – Libby Davies

 

Paul Martin, Architect of Social Inequality? Yes, Says MP Davies

Liberal B.C. government will cut people off welfare on April 1, 2004


Libby Davies Presents Plans to Reunite More Families in Canada

Libby Davies Presents Plans to Reunite More Families in Canada

VANCOUVER – Vancouver East NDP MP Libby Davies held a press conference today on her votable Bill to help more families reunite in Canada. Davies was joined by Mary-Woo Sims, former B.C. Chief Human Rights Commissioner.

Davies’ “Once in Lifetime” Bill, called C-436, would allow a Canadian citizen or permanent resident to sponsor, on one occasion, a family member who would otherwise not qualify under family class provisions.

“I believe Canada’s immigration system must have a much stronger emphasis on family reunification and I believe this bill would begin to address this shortcoming,” said Davies.

The idea has already received tremendous support. In the year 2000, groups in Vancouver collected over 15,000 signatures in support of this policy change. The idea was floated by the former Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, Elinor Caplan during the 2000 election but was later dropped.

“The reason we received support is because the current definitions are so narrow and restrictive that it becomes very difficult to undertake family reunification under the present policies,” commented Davies.

Relatives under these proposed changes to the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA) would be regarded as a family class sponsor, even though they would not be one of the relatives outlined in the Act.

“It has been clear that over recent years the federal government’s migration targets have not been met,” said Davies. “This “Once in a Lifetime” bill would allow them to do so and to live up to their own commitment to promote family reunification.”

Davies has also invited the public to submit their immigration “horror stories.” Five of the worst cases will be brought to the attention of the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration Canada, urging him to deal with the mess and chronic backlogs that plague his department.

Davies will have the first hour of debate on Bill C-436 in Parliament on Monday November 3rd at 11 am (EST).



Davies Points Finger at Prime Minister-in-Waiting Paul Martin for BC Governments’ Welfare Time Limits

Davies Points Finger at Prime Minister-in-Waiting Paul Martin for BC Governments’ Welfare Time Limits

OTTAWA – Libby Davies, MP for Vancouver East, today challenged the federal government to intervene in the BC government’s decision to institute a 2-year time limit for welfare recipients.

“The former finance Minster’s elimination of the Canadian Assistance Plan has paved the way for the BC government to be the first province to impose time limits for social assistance”, said the federal NDP Social Policy critic in Question Period today.

Paul Martin, as finance minister in 1995 eliminated national welfare standards, this has left the door open to provincial governments to eliminated social assistance even to people in need. As of April 1, 2004 the Government of BC will begin cutting people off welfare if they have been receiving assistance for more than 2 years.

“This is going to result in tens of thousands of people being without a means to support themselves and clearly violates rights protected in the Canadian Charter of Rights of Freedoms”, said the Vancouver East MP.

Community organizations from across BC are preparing a constitutional challenge to the 24-month time limits on social assistance. “The federal government is going to have to sit up and listen to this legal challenge as it highlights their failure to protect constitutionally entrenched rights and to guaranteed the provision of essential public services”, adds Davies.

The court challenge will argue that the 24-month cut off violates basic human rights guarantees under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Section 7 and 15 of the Charter outlines an individual’s right to life, liberty, security of person and equality under the law. Section 36 of the Constitution also applies in this case, as it jointly obliges the federal and provincial governments to provide essential public services to all Canadians.

“The federal government has to stand up and say these changes are unlawful and must be stopped now. They have a responsibility to Canadians and it is shameful if they hide behind the excuse that it is out of their jurisdiction”.





Same Sex Marriage

Same Sex Marriage

Ms. Libby Davies (Vancouver East, NDP): Mr. Speaker, the leader of the Canadian Alliance led off today on his motion by claiming that this issue of same sex marriage is not about human rights. That is how he started his debate today.

I think it needs to be said that he and his party are dead wrong. It is about human rights and no matter how the Canadian Alliance tries to squirm out of it, or twist it, or make it an issue that it is about the courts, or grab any other kind of excuse they cannot escape judgment that this is about human rights. It is about their stance on human rights. It is about our Charter of Rights and Freedoms and it is about the value of our society and how the law is applied to all people regardless of their race, religion, disability, gender or sexual orientation. I want to deal with one other statement that came from the leader of the Canadian Alliance this morning. He said that people had “contorted this issue into a human rights issue without public consensus”. I find it reprehensible that he would challenge the constitutional rights of Canadians to seek justice before the courts. This is something that we have in this country. In fact I would say that we should be applauding the efforts of the people who have advanced this issue through the courts and asserted their own individual rights.

What is equally troubling is the notion of public consensus. What does he mean by this idea of public consensus? Is the Canadian Alliance suggesting that public consensus must exist for change to take place? Can we imagine if that position were applied to interracial marriage which in the past, as my colleague from Burnaby–Douglas has pointed out, was opposed in the United States and where certainly public opinion was very divided? Can we imagine if that same kind of position about public consensus were applied to that issue? I think even the Canadian Alliance would say, no, this would be unacceptable. Yet the principle is no different with regard to same sex marriage.

I do not believe that Parliament has the right to impose a definition of marriage that excludes some Canadians only for their sexual orientation, just as we have no right to outlaw interracial marriage or civil marriage between people of different faiths. The proposed law that we hope that the Liberal government will bring in sooner than later is a permissive law and is not a mandatory law. This is a matter of a deeply personal choice. No one is forcing the leader of the Canadian Alliance to marry a man if he does not want to. Nor is there any suggestion that a religious institution must perform a marriage if it does not want to. This is about a civil marriage between people who are in a committed relationship and make their own choice that they want to marry, whether they are heterosexual or whether they are two women or two men.

I have to ask myself what is it from the point of view of the Canadian Alliance that is wrong with this idea of equality in marriage? I believe it comes from a very deeply ingrained fear, a perceived threat that somehow exists that displays a very deep prejudice toward people who are equal but different. This motion displays a very homophobic attitude.

I can accept that members of Parliament personally are opposed to same sex marriage, that they somehow find it difficult for whatever cultural reasons or religious reasons, but I want to say that we have a privilege here that other Canadians do not have. We have the privilege to vote. The 301 of us in this place have the privilege to vote. I believe that as a member of Parliament I have a duty to uphold human rights, not to diminish them.

What one’s conscience says is one thing. It is a very important matter. But I believe that our duty as members of Parliament is to apply the law fairly and to apply the charter fairly, without prejudice and without bias. I am very proud that our leader, Jack Layton, and our party, advocate and support marriage equality. Our party has had a long tradition of defending minority rights, whether it was Japanese Canadians who were imprisoned during the war or the rights of aboriginal people who still face terrible discrimination. We defend those rights as we do the rights of gays, lesbians and transgendered people, even when it is not popular to do so, in fact, even more so when it is not popular to do so.

I have been delighted to see the celebration of marriage of same sex couples in my own community, including people like Elizabeth and Dawn Barbeau, who are part of the legal struggle and victory for marriage equality. I would like to congratulate Claudette, who is one of the interpreters in the House, and her partner Gail, who were married on June 28. They are part of our community. I am part of the community too and my choice to marry my partner, who is a woman, is surely our choice and no one else’s.

I call on members today to vote down what I think is just a horrible motion. If we believe in equality for Canadians on all of the grounds that exist, then we should be striking down this motion. We should have the courage to do so, even though we know there are varying opinions in the community. We should do it on the basis of equality. We should do it on the basis of justice. We should do it on the basis that if two people, whoever they are, whether they are two men, two women, a man and a woman, make a choice that they want to have a civil marriage, they should be allowed to do so.



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