
A nurse touches the hand of a palliative care patient.
OSV News photo/Manon Cruz, Reuters
June 18, 2026
Share this article:
Canadian culture-of-life advocates now await a response from Justice Minister Sean Fraser and Prime Minister Mark Carney on a special joint parliamentary committee's (AMAD) advice to permanently halt the expansion of euthanasia for persons suffering solely from mental illness.
A wholesale embrace of this recommendation would transform a promising development into a significant victory for pro-life Canadians who have spoken out against the country’s medical assistance in dying (MAiD) regime for a decade.
Canadian Physicians for Life Executive Director Nicole Scheidl spoke with the Catholic Register in the immediate aftermath of the AMAD committee tabling their 98-page report in the House of Commons on June 17. She offered praise for how this body as a whole conducted their work.
“It is a very good day,” said Scheidl with a joyful chuckle. “I do think that Parliament took this seriously. They really tried to hear from people. There are some parliamentarians and senators who do not want any restrictions on euthanasia in Canada, and that is a big problem and a mistake to think like that. But aside from them, the committee did a really good job.”
Physicians, psychiatrists, professors, policy analysts, disability advocates, Indigenous advocates, family advocates and international experts were among the myriad of voices who offered expertise or personal accounts to the committee.
According to the report, before these sessions “the committee heard claims that practice standards, guidance documents and assessor training demonstrate readiness” for expansion on March 17, 2027, but ultimately “the strongest evidence pointed the other way.”
Dissenting opinions were offered by Senators Rosemary Moodie, Pamela Wallin and Kristopher Wells and by the Bloc Québécois.
Alex Schadenberg, executive director of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, had a sense that perspectives on potentially expanding MAiD were shifting when he testified before the AMAD committee on May 5. He outlined two main reasons why the committee is calling for indefinite shelving.
“This has come about not only because euthanasia for mental illness alone is different in nature from euthanasia for physical illness, but on top of that with so many stories in Canada of really questionable euthanasia deaths that have been building up that led to this happening,” said Schadenberg. “The government said ‘no, I don’t think we can handle more of these.’”
Alissa Golob, co-founder of RightNow, a non-profit organization that helps elect pro-life MPs, praised the committee’s recommendation.
“Pro-life organizations, members of parliament, senators, staffers, and regular Canadians have worked hard to stop the expansion of assisted suicide for many years in this country, and today's joint committee recommendation is our first victory in that effort,” said Golob.
Krista Carr, the CEO of Inclusion Canada, an organization that mobilized 90 disability and mental health bodies to sign a letter opposing euthanasia expansion, complimented the committee for realizing that a further broadening of access is untenable.
"For years, Canadians have been told that more time, more study, and more safeguards would make MAiD for mental illness workable," said Carr. "Today's recommendation recognizes what many have argued from the beginning: the challenges associated with MAiD for mental illness are not temporary implementation issues. They raise fundamental questions about equality and how we respond to suffering."
A statement on page 38 of the report endorses the conviction of Inclusion Canada, and many other organizations, that “psychiatric euthanasia disproportionately affects vulnerable demographics.”
Other significant conclusions presented in the report include:
Conservative MP Tamara Jansen said the committee’s topline recommendation could be acted upon by Parliament, supporting her existing bill C-218, of which a permanent shelving of MAiD for mental illness is the central provision. Potentially, the Liberal Party may choose to sponsor their own bill instead.
Energized by this seemingly major breakthrough, Scheidl, Schadenberg, Golob, Carr and a host of other advocates and organizations could push back at the Canadian euthanasia complex even more by advocating for additional reforms. A formalized and comprehensive review of Canada’s existing MAiD laws, pushing other provinces to follow in the footsteps of Alberta’s Bill 18, and advocating for the overturning of Track 2 MAiD (removing the foreseeable natural death guardrail) are a few of the causes the pro-life community will continue pursuing.
(Amundson is an associate editor and writer for The Catholic Register.)
Share this article:
Join the conversation and have your say: submit a letter to the Editor. Letters should be brief and must include full name, address and phone number (street and phone number will not be published). Letters may be edited for length and clarity.