Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Libby Davies talks about her winter sitting

As I continue with my roundup of queer MPs, I caught up with NDP MP Libby Davies after question period yesterday.

Q: What did you get up to over the break?

A: I worked in the riding. We did a very successful roundtable discussion in Victoria the day ahead of the premiers’ conference, and monitored what was going on at the premiers’ conference, and then came back to Ottawa and held a special meeting of the health committee based on the response the premiers gave. We’re in the process of formulating a bigger plan or campaign around the future of medicare in Canada and what’s been going on federally.

Q: What do you have to look forward to over the winter sitting?

A: Healthcare is my file right now, so that’s taking up a lot of my time, and it’s a very big file, and we have great NDP members on the committee, so we’re dividing it up and each specializing on certain things, so I’m very happy about that. We’re working as a team. We are going to be generating a bigger campaign around the future of medicare. Besides that, issues that come out of my riding that in some ways are very much related to healthcare, such as affordable housing and homelessness, the rights of sex workers, the impacts on drug users from the “war on drugs” – these are issues that are ongoing, whether it’s Insite or what’s happening to sex workers in the court challenges that are happening right now. These are things that I’m paying attention to because they don’t get a lot of attention in Parliament, and I feel like l have to be a strong advocate for those issues, and I want to be a strong advocate. Those things are also very much a part of the work that I do.

Q: In terms of what you’ve got coming up in committee?

A: All of the committees are quite problematic because the Conservatives are foiling any attempt to deal with any substantive issues. At health committee, we’re certainly looking at very interesting issues like chronic diseases and aging, and so on, but these are all things that have been studied, and we’ve been pressing very hard at the health committee that the critical issue that underlies everything is the federal government’s lack of leadership and their unilateral decision with the funding formula with the provinces. We’ve been trying to get that addressed at the committee so that we can have some debate. We just can’t have the federal government making decisions where no one gets to say anything, so we’ve been pressing that very hard, and we’ll continue to do so.

Q: Do you feel like they’re trying to give you make-work projects than something significant?

A: I think that’s happening on a lot of committees. We’re studying things that are well known, like on chronic diseases or aging. They’re important issues, but the amount of evidence and knowledge about what the reality is and what needs to be done is overwhelming. We could paper all of the walls here in the foyer, there’s been so much study. There’s no question the Conservatives’ game plan is to silence committees, is to stop them from doing any substantive work, particularly any work that challenges the Conservative government, so that’s a challenge for us. They have a majority and we have to be very creative and do everything we can to get these issues before the committee for debate.

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