OTTAWA — The Conservatives and NDP sit on opposite sides of the political spectrum, but they are voicing similar concerns about the trajectory of Canada's medical assistance in dying (MAID) regime.
The two opposition parties could be moving toward an unlikely alliance against further expansion, with a report on extending MAID eligibility to the mentally ill expected by summer.
Conservative Opposition to Expansion
Conservative MP Michael Cooper, a member of the joint House-Senate committee preparing the report, reiterated his party's opposition to the expansion of MAID for the mentally ill last week.
"I think the evidence is very clear that the expansion for MAID and mental illness cannot go forward," Cooper told reporters on Wednesday.
Cooper said there were "two fundamental issues" making the expansion untenable: the challenge in diagnosing which mental illnesses are irremediable and the difficulty in determining whether those requesting MAID are of sound mind.
The Liberal government, which first introduced MAID for terminal illnesses in 2016, has twice delayed its expansion to individuals whose sole underlying condition is a mental disorder. The expansion was initially set to take effect in March 2023, after the government accepted a Senate proposal for a sunset period on the exclusion of MAID for the mentally ill.
This was subsequently pushed back to March 2024 and, most recently, March 17, 2027.
Cooper said the Liberals' appropriate course of action would be to introduce a bill delaying the expansion indefinitely.
NDP Leader Raises Concerns
He and his fellow Conservatives may have an unlikely ally in upstart federal NDP leader Avi Lewis.
Speaking to reporters in Ottawa one week earlier, Lewis said he was concerned by recent reports of mentally vulnerable Canadians choosing MAID "out of desperation."
"People in mental health crisis should be getting the supports that they need," said Lewis. "If people are choosing MAID, choosing to die, because they can't get the supports they need in life, something is broken in our system."
He also said he was concerned that the chronic underfunding and under-resourcing of disability supports could be steering disabled Canadians toward MAID.
Lewis, who does not have a seat in Parliament, said that the NDP caucus will be discussing the matter internally.
The NDP, which lost official party status in last year's election, does not have any representation on the ad hoc MAID committee or any other committee of Parliament.
Expert Commentary
Brian Dijkema, the head of faith-based think tank Cardus, called Lewis's comments on MAID a "throwback" to the NDP's roots in the Social Gospel.
"The NDP is a party built on public service and providing care for the vulnerable… this is actually fairly old-school left-wing policy," said Dijkema.



