Commonwealth Parliamentarians with disabilities: a new network.

AuthorMurphy, Kevin

Building on his work promoting collaboration and discussion among Canadian parliamentarians with disabilities, in this article the author highlights plans for an exploratory conference looking to establish a Commonwealth-wide network. The three-day conference is being planned for this summer in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

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In the Spring 2015 edition of the Canadian Parliamentary Review (Vol. 38, No. 1), I joined with colleagues from across Canada to provide personal perspectives on what it's like to be a parliamentarian with a disability and the associated challenges, including running for a party's nomination and championing local accessibility legislation.

I serve as both a Member and Speaker of the Nova Scotia House of Assembly as a person with a disability (quadriplegic) and I am joined in the House by my colleague, Alfie MacLeod (amputee). In Canada alone, we have many serving parliamentarians with disabilities at the provincial and federal levels who are spread out across our great and vast country, including two federal cabinet ministers, Carla Qualtrough, Minister of Sport and Persons with Disabilities (visually impaired) and Kent Hehr, Minister of Veterans Affairs (quadriplegic). Member of Parliament Diane Finley (visually impaired) in the House of Commons and Senator Chantal Petitclerc (paraplegic), are joined at the provincial level by: Steven Fletcher (quadriplegic) in Manitoba; Stephanie Cadieux (paraplegic), Michelle Stilwell (quadriplegic) and Sam Sullivan (quadriplegic) in British Columbia; Ed Doherty (mobility issues) in New Brunswick and Mark Docherty (mobility issues) in Saskatchewan.

To reaffirm the obvious, our populations are diverse and the Commonwealth is a perfect example which reflects this diversity. Nations can categorize their populations in various ways including, but not limited to age, gender, sexual orientation, Indigenous peoples, income, ethnicity and/or faith, but a community that is often overlooked in a political context are persons with disabilities. The World Health Organization reports that in most countries about 15 per cent of the population report having some form of disability; yet research shows that very few people with disabilities have been elected to public office.

In discussions with like-minded parliamentarians and persons in the disability community, since my own election in 2013 I have tried to bring the topic of encouraging persons with disabilities to run for elected office to the...

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