[SWAF-Potluck] Prostitutes need to find a way to get politicians' attention
Andy Sorfleet
a.sorfleet at gmail.com
Sat Dec 21 15:24:00 PST 2013
http://www.vancouversun.com/
VANCOUVER SUN
Friday, December 20, 2013
Stephen Maher, Postmedia News
Prostitutes need to find a way to get politicians' attention
[image: Inline image 1]
[photo caption]
Red umbrellas, used as a symbol for sex workers rights, are seen in front
of a rally at Allan Gardens park to support Toronto sex workers and their
rights in Toronto on Friday.
Photograph by: Mark Blinch/The Canadian Press, Postmedia News
On Friday, the Supreme Court of Canada struck down our prostitution laws,
accepting the arguments of prostitutes, who had argued persuasively that
the laws violated Section 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which
says "everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of the person
and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the
principles of fundamental justice."
Prostitutes argue convincingly that by making it illegal for them to do
their work, the law forces them into unsafe situations, which is plainly
true. If it is illegal to live off the avails of prostitution, or to
communicate openly, prostitutes are not able to establish safe conditions
of employment, and as a result more of them are beaten and murdered.
"Parliament has the power to regulate against nuisances, but not at the
cost of the health, safety and lives of prostitutes," wrote Chief Justice
Beverley McLachlin.
The prostitutes celebrated their victory, but the justices gave Parliament
a year to come up with a new law, and it seems unlikely that sex work will
really be legalized.
Although prostitution is itself legal, there is strong political opposition
to accepting it, and the prime minister seems opposed to accepting a
harm-reduction approach to prostitution or drugs.
Two days before the ruling, Benjamin Perrin, the former lawyer from the
Prime Minister's Office whose apparently deleted emails mysteriously
reappeared recently, wrote an article saying that Canada should write new
laws -- with criminal sanctions for prostitutes' customers -- with the aim
of ending prostitution.
Robert Staley, the PMO lawyer who helped the RCMP find Perrin's emails,
represented three groups that intervened in the prostitution case, asking
the court to uphold the law: The Christian Legal Fellowship, the Catholic
Civil Rights League and Real Women of Canada.
Staley argued that Parliament has every right to legislate on matters of
morality.
"The Court of Appeal's decision in this case directly challenges
parliament's ability to legislate in areas that reflect a shared belief
that certain acts are immoral," he wrote.
This unease with the courts is shared by many Conservatives, including
Employment Minister Jason Kenney, who said Friday: "My own view is the
judiciary should be restrained of the exercise of overturning a democratic
consensus."
Harper's first chief of staff, Ian Brodie, wrote a book, Friends of the
Court, complaining about the way that "privileged interest group
litigants," like the prostitutes in this case, are able to advance policy
agendas through the courts that they could not manage through the electoral
system.
Same-sex marriage is the best example. The courts opened the door to gay
marriages, ruling that banning them was an unconstitutional violation of
charter-guaranteed equality rights. Jean Chretien decided not to fight the
rulings, and in 2005, MPs voted to legalize same-sex marriage.
The Charter does not give the courts the power to make laws, but it does
give them the authority to measure any particular law against a higher law
-- the Charter -- which was democratically adopted by Parliament. If the
courts make a Charter ruling that a legislature can't stomach, it can
invoke the notwithstanding clause, which allows governments to overrule the
courts.
After Friday's decision, Justice Minister Peter MacKay said the government
is "exploring all possible options to ensure the criminal law continues to
address the significant harms that flow from prostitution to communities,
those engaged in prostitution, and vulnerable persons."
It seems unlikely that the government will invoke the notwithstanding
clause now, and likely that it will table a law like that in Sweden, where
it is illegal to pay for sex but not illegal to sell it.
Advocates of that approach say that it reduces street prostitution, which
is so dangerous, and thus protects prostitutes. Prostitutes say it drives
them underground, where they are at risk.
I suspect the prostitutes are right, but we will likely get a new law in
Canada, prostitutes will keep being killed, the law will be challenged and
we will end up back in the Supreme Court several years from now.
Opinion in Canada is divided -- with social conservatives and some women's
groups opposed to legalization -- and prostitutes and some women's groups
in favour of it.
Rather than confronting our powerlessness and taking small steps to improve
prostitutes' lives, it is easier to defend public morality, blame
prostitutes for choosing to lead immoral lives and pretend that it's
possible to end prostitution.
Only the courts are forcing politicians to even consider the problem.
Prostitutes, unlike dairy farmers, are not a desirable voter bloc. The
people most affected by these laws are not highly paid escorts, but
drug-addicted streetwalkers, women leading desperate lives.
They don't vote, which makes them much less interesting to politicians than
people who do.
On the other hand, some of them, particularly in Ottawa, likely have MPs
for clients.
Perhaps they should file records of their meetings with the Registry of
Lobbyists and see if that helps change the nature of the debate.
Copyright (c) Postmedia News
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.resist.ca/pipermail/swaf-potluck/attachments/20131221/0319d51f/attachment-0001.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: vansun-131220-1.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 44810 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://lists.resist.ca/pipermail/swaf-potluck/attachments/20131221/0319d51f/attachment-0001.jpg>
More information about the SWAF-Potluck
mailing list