Filibuster at foreign affairs committee ends with compromise on abortion rights study
OTTAWA — A month-long filibuster at the House of Commons foreign affairs committee is over after MPs agreed to delay a study on reproductive rights until after the Conservatives choose their next leader.
The filibuster — a procedural move that often involves speaking for an extended period of time as a way to delay a decision — began when Liberal Hedy introduced a motion calling for the study on May 16.
The delay means that work on the committee’s other studies on vaccine equity, the situation in Taiwan and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is unlikely to wrap up until the fall.
Liberal MP Rob Oliphant says the compromise to delay the study was reached because the Conservatives did not want to have to discuss abortion while their leadership race was underway.