Macleans: Libby Davies leaves Ottawa
Macleans: Libby Davies leaves Ottawa
On the first day of the new Parliament in 1997, Libby Davies found herself walking to the Senate to hear the Speech from the Throne, a tradition she was not entirely familiar with, and in the immediate vicinity of Allan Rock, the newly appointed minister of health. Davies—a former city councillor in Vancouver, co-founder of the Downtown Eastside Resident Association and a long-time activist in Canada’s most infamous neighbourhood—wanted then to talk to Rock about what havoc heroin was wrecking in her riding. “I introduced myself and I said, ‘Can I come and meet you? This is a life-and-death issue; people are dying of drug overdoses; we’ve got to stop criminalizing them; we need help,’ ” Davies recalls. Rock, she says, said he was delighted to meet her and that she could come and see him any time. “So I thought, ‘Well, this is amazing,’ ” Davies says. “I got back to my office and we wrote an email. We wrote a letter; we started phoning. Of course, they totally ignored us,” she continues. “After about a month or so, I thought, ‘Well, what would I do in my neighbourhood? How would I handle this?’ And I thought, ‘Okay, I know what I would do.’ So I went to his office and I walked in and I sat down and I said, ‘I’ve been trying to get an appointment for over a month. You haven’t replied, so I just want to let you know I’m not leaving until I get an appointment.’ ” She smiled, then took a seat.
November 2006
Libby in the News
The NDP marks World AIDS Day
The NDP marks World AIDS Day
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House of Commons
HANSARD
November 28, 2012
Mr. Speaker, on behalf of the NDP, we want to thank the many organizations and individuals whose tireless efforts in Canada and abroad support those living with HIV/AIDS and their work to prevent future infections.
The AIDS epidemic has become a global public health challenge which warrants our collective attention and demands our concerted action. Even amidst advances in medical science, the scarcity of live-saving drugs condemns too many to a life of poverty and from dying a preventable death.
It is more important than ever that we support life-saving initiatives to fight AIDS-related deaths. For this reason, I urge my colleagues to vote in favour of Bill C-398 tonight, the ‘Medicines for All’ bill, which would save millions of lives worldwide.
On this solemn but hopeful occasion, we in the NDP recommit to ending the spread of HIV/AIDS at home and abroad, and supporting those who live with HIV/AIDS to ensure their dignity and rights are upheld.