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The 1st session of the 44th Parliament was prorogued on January 6, 2025.
Prorogation occurs when the Governor General, on the advice of the Prime Minister, issues a proclamation putting an end to a parliamentary session. In practice, as soon as Parliament is either prorogued or dissolved, all committee activity ceases and, as such, all orders of reference and committee studies lapse.
No committee may sit during a prorogation. The only aspect of a committee's work which survives prorogation is a request for a government response to a committee report.
The information on these pages refers to committees and their work before Parliament was prorogued.
Learn MoreBill C 14 required that the provisions contained in the bill be referred to a committee of the Senate, the House of Commons or both for review at the start of the fifth year after the day the bill received Royal Assent. Similarly, Bill C-7 required establishing a joint Senate and House of Commons committee to conduct a comprehensive review of the Criminal Code MAID provisions and their application, as well as “issues relating to mature minors, advance requests, mental illness, the state of palliative care in Canada and the protection of Canadians with disabilities.”
In April 2021, motions were adopted in the House of Commons and Senate establishing the Special Joint Committee on Medical Assistance in Dying. Two meetings were held before the dissolution of Parliament.
The Special Joint Committee on Medical Assistance in Dying was established again in March 2022. In June 2022, the committee presented an interim report focused on MAID MD-SUMC, on 22 June 2022to which the government provided a response in October 2022. The committee released its final report in February 2023, and the government provided its response in June 2023.
Concerns have been raised that the health care system would not be prepared to safely and consistently provide MAID MD-SUMC by the 17 March 2023 deadline set out in Bill C-7. To address those concerns, the law was amended by Bill C-39 to delay the availability of MAID MD-SUMC until 17 March 2024.
AMAD’s final report included a recommendation that the committee be re-established five months prior to the coming into force of MAID MD-SUMC, “to verify the degree of preparedness attained for a safe and adequate application of MAID (in MD-SUMC situations).” In October 2023, motions were adopted in the House of Commons and Senate to re-establish the Special Joint Committee on Medical Assistance in Dying.