Catholic bishops join MPs in push to restrict medically-provided death (MAiD)

MP Garnett Genuis at a press conference introducing his private member’s Bill C-260 to prevent coercion of individuals to receive assisted dying. On the same day, Canada’s bishops supported Langley MP Tamara Jansen’s private member’s bill to prevent medically-provided death for persons whose sole medical condition is mental illness. (CPAC screenshot, The B.C. Catholic)

By Terry O’Neill, The B.C. Catholic

[Canadian Catholic News] – Two efforts to limit Canada’s assisted suicide / euthanasia framework recently converged, with Conservative MP Garnett Genuis announcing a bill focused on MAiD coercion and the Catholic bishops supporting legislation to prohibit assisted dying for mental illness.

Conservative MP Garnett Genuis introduced a private member’s bill Feb. 5, 2026 that would amend the Criminal Code to prohibit any federal or provincial government employee in a position of authority, other than a doctor or nurse, from initiating a discussion about medical assistance in dying.

Genuis said Bill C-260, An Act to amend the Criminal Code (medical assistance in dying — protection against coercion), comes in response to numerous stories of counsellors suggesting medically-provided death to persons such as military veterans or disabled men and women who are seeking support, not death.

Meanwhile, the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB) issued a statement the same day strongly supporting Langley MP Tamara Jansen’s private member’s Bill C-218, which would prevent persons whose sole medical condition is mental illness from accessing euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide (“MAiD”).

Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB) statement – ENGLISH  /  FRENCH

The statement from the CCCB’s permanent council, its most authoritative body between annual plenary assemblies, said Bill C-218 “would be a constructive step” toward limiting euthanasia and protecting individuals with mental illness.

The Catholic bishops noted the UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities has called on Canada to rescind “Track 2 MAiD,” which allows euthanasia for those whose natural death is not reasonably foreseeable, and to permanently exclude medically-provided death for persons whose sole underlying medical condition is a mental illness.

The bishops also called on the federal government “to allow free conscience voting on this matter, given its profound moral and social implications.”

They said current research indicates mental illness is “not necessarily irremediable” and called for improved access to mental illness treatment and palliative care.

At a news conference in Ottawa, Genuis said his Bill C-260 would clarify assisted suicide / euthanasia laws by explicitly covering coercive situations such as counselling sessions.

The Member of Parliament for Sherwood Park-Fort Saskatchewan in Alberta, said the bill is aimed at countering the “discrimination and coercion” that “undermine the experience of persons trying to access supports that they are entitled to.”

He cited the example of Nicolas Bergeron, a 46-year-old Quebec man, who was not interested in medically facilitated death. “But a social worker, who came to his house for an entirely different reason, repeatedly tried to push him to change his mind,” Genuis said.

Genuis said the counsellor presented Bergeron with “a very bleak, worst-case scenario for his illness and told him that sometimes you just have to stop fighting … This is wrong and this is not a one-off. This MAiD coercion by non-experts in positions of authority is part of a troubling pattern.”

The bill states: “Every person who, being an officer or employee of the Government of Canada or of a province, other than a medical practitioner or a registered nurse, including a nurse practitioner, initiates a discussion with a person about the availability to that person of medical assistance in dying is guilty of an offence punishable on summary conviction if they
(a) by virtue of their profession, are in a position of trust or authority towards that person; and
(b) know that the person has not specifically requested to have such a discussion with them.”

While current law requires that a request for medically-provided death be voluntary and free from external pressure, supporters of the bill argue that consent can be compromised when individuals feel they have no meaningful alternatives to relieve their suffering. Supporters say inadequate access to palliative care, disability supports, mental health treatment, or stable housing amounts to “systemic coercion.”

The Criminal Code currently requires that individuals requesting euthanasia give informed consent and be advised of available means to relieve suffering, including palliative care. Proponents of Bill C-260 argue that explicitly naming coercion in the MAiD context would make it a more enforceable criminal consideration, rather than relying primarily on administrative checks and professional judgment.

Genuis has repeatedly argued that assisted suicide/ euthanasia cannot be considered a genuine choice when people lack access to life-affirming supports. That concern was underscored during a House of Commons committee exchange last fall with Krista Carr, chief executive officer of Inclusion Canada.

Appearing before the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance, Carr told MPs that people with disabilities are already being placed at a disadvantage by public policy decisions that erode supports.

Asked by Genuis whether people with disabilities would be “net worse off” as a result of proposed changes to disability tax credits, Carr replied, “Yes. I think it’s an unintended consequence of a bill meant to make life more affordable for Canadians. As a consequence of that, yes, in a net position they will be worse off than they are now.”

The bill is being introduced amid ongoing debate over the scope and safeguards of Canada’s MAiD regime, particularly for people whose natural death is not reasonably foreseeable. Disability advocates and organizations, including Inclusion Canada, have repeatedly warned that the expansion of medically-provided death has outpaced the development of adequate social supports, placing people in precarious living situations at risk.

As a private member’s bill, Bill C-260 must pass second reading in the House of Commons before proceeding to committee study.

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Canadian Catholic News (CCN) is a national news service, with members including Catholic newspapers, organizations, and individuals: CanadianCatholicNews.ca

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