conservatives

Supervised injection sites: Ideology comes with big blinkers

By. JEFFREY SIMPSON, Globe and Mail

In the ongoing struggle between ideology and evidence within the Harper government, ideology too often wins.

The entire field of criminal justice features the government’s determination to ignore evidence. Occasionally, the evidence is so incontrovertible, and the means for forcing it on the government so forceful, that the government has no choice but to adjust course and, in a few instances, to actually retreat.

So it will be with the supervised injection site in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside after the Supreme Court’s unanimous support of the program’s continuation and its utter rebuff of the Harper government’s opposition to it.

The minister at the time of the government’s appeal against supervised injections at the Insite clinic was Tony Clement, now under justified assault for boondoggle spending in his constituency surrounding last year’s G8 summit in Huntsville. Read more »

Tough — or dumb— on crime?

By Editorial - Comox Valley Record

Anybody who has ever been victimized by crime remembers the effect it had — and perhaps is still having — on them.

A sense of innocence, trust or security can be lost — irretrievably in some cases.

Being doubly victimized by a Canadian legal system that bends over backwards to ensure the accused gets a fair trial might create a feeling of betrayal.

The Stephen Harper government is tapping into these feelings on top of the existing anti-crime element of its ideology.

No politician — or editor — wants to appear soft on crime, which might explain why few political opponents criticized the Conservatives’ Safe Streets and Communities Act during Question Period. Read more »

John Moore: In the Insite debate, facts trump ideology

By. John Moore, National Post

Facts and science found refuge in Canada’s Supreme Court last Friday. The court delivered a smack down to ideology, finding that the success of Vancouver’s safe injection program in providing better outcomes for drug addicts and improving public order is inarguable. The court’s highly technical decision hinged on the unanimous conclusion that the program’s goals have been provably met. Debate over.

Insite works on the principal of harm reduction; if an individual is going to use drugs then it’s better they do it in a clean and supervised environment. The goals of the program are to prevent the transmission of disease, lower the incidence of public drug taking and to expose users on a regular basis to addiction professionals, increasing the opportunities to choose rehab over continued drug use.

For half a decade opponents of Insite have marshalled bogus studies, torqued factoids and the occasional legitimate dissenting research in order to insist that it’s a complete disaster. The Prime Minister declared it to be “a failed experiment,” as if saying this would make it true. Read more »

Medical marijuana law under review

By David McKie, CBC News

Health Canada began two days of closed-door talks Wednesday about changes to the controversial medical marijuana law that has faced legal challenges and criticism for being ineffective.

But even as meetings get underway in Ottawa, there are concerns Health Canada is on the wrong track with a law that asks doctors to ignore a sworn obligation to protect patients’ health, while forcing patients to go to great lengths to obtain a drug that many say eases their pain. Read more »

Tories slap two-day limit on debate over sweeping crime legislation

By: GLORIA GALLOWAY, Globe and Mail

The Conservative government has decided to allow just two days additional of debate on its omnibus crime bill before the proposed law goes off to a Commons committee for study.

Government House Leader Peter Van Loan announced the time restriction on Tuesday – a move designed to thwart long hours of criticism from opposition benches over the controversial 102-page piece of legislation that wraps together nine separate bills the Conservatives failed to enact during their minority government years.

Interim Liberal Leader Bob Rae immediately denounced the cutting off of debate as a act of a “majority abusing power.” Read more »

Are `tough-on-crime' Tories shutting door to restorative justice?

BY DOUGLAS QUAN, POSTMEDIA NEWS

There was a time when Manjit Virk would have liked nothing more than to wring the neck of Warren Glowatski, one of two teenagers convicted of murdering his daughter, Reena, "as if he were a chicken."

But in the fall of 2005, when the two came face to face in a semicircle of chairs in the basement of a church, something very different happened.

"It was the most unusual experience I had encountered in my life," the Victoria father later recounted in his book, Reena: A Father's Story.

"My daughter's killer was shaking hands with me." Read more »

Tories roll out huge crime bill

By BRUCE CHEADLE The Canadian Press

OTTAWA — The Conservative government dismissed the cost to taxpayers and the direction of crime trends Tuesday as it introduced sweeping new criminal-justice changes it says will make Canadians feel safer.
``We're not governing on the basis of the latest statistics,'' Justice Minister Rob Nicholson said at a news conference in suburban Brampton, Ont.

``We're governing on the basis of what's right to better protect victims and law-abiding Canadians.''

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has moved to make good on an election promise to bundle a series of proposed measures as part of his self-described ``tough-on-crime'' agenda. Read more »

Tories table their criminal-reform legislation

BY TOBI COHEN AND JASON FEKETE, The Province

OTTAWA — A sweeping omnibus crime bill tabled Tuesday that seeks to crack down on young offenders, drug dealers, sexual predators and Canadians in foreign prisons is under fire from critics — who argue it's a waste of time and money since crime rates are on the wane in Canada.

The bill, dubbed the Safe Streets and Communities Act, comprises nine individual justice bills that died during the previous parliamentary session because the then-minority Tory government could not push them through. Read more »

Very tough crime bill No. 1 as House resumes

The Canadian Press

OTTAWA The Conservatives say jobs are their top priority, however, crime is first on their legislative agenda as Parliament resumes this week.

An internal caucus memo circulating on Sunday says the government will introduce an omnibus crime bill on Tuesday.

A senior government official says the bill will be called the Safe Streets and Communities Act.

It follows through on a campaign pledge to pass a bushel of crime-crackdown laws within the first 100 sitting days of Parliament.

All of the laws in the new bill are expected to be among those on the table when Parliament was dissolved for the last election. Read more »

Day of decorum dissolves into political partisanship as Parliament resumes

By: Stephanie Levitz, The Canadian Press

OTTAWA - Few ties bind Members of Parliament but as the House of Commons returned Monday, all briefly united to remember the NDP's late leader Jack Layton.

But the common bond quickly devolved into a Gordian knot befitting the political tug of war that will continue throughout the fall session.

The new legislative agenda of the majority Conservatives will be rolled out Tuesday, beginning with the re-introduction of a bundle of crime bills whose unknown cost to the public purse sparked the last election. Read more »

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