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Provincial Liberals hunt for relevance — and a leader
Provincial Liberals hunt for relevance — and a leader

Winnipeg Free Press

time19-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Winnipeg Free Press

Provincial Liberals hunt for relevance — and a leader

Opinion In recent months, there has been much discussion regarding the current predicament and near-future prospects of Manitoba's Progressive Conservative Party. Hard questions have been asked. Hands have been wrung. Eyes have rolled. Heads have been scratched. Having been emphatically defeated and deservedly humbled after seven years of austere policy-making under the leadership of Brian Pallister and, briefly, Heather Stefanson, the PCs have elected a new leader, offered apologies of a sort for the most noxious positions adopted during the last provincial election campaign, and pledged to bring a more palatable brand of conservatism to Manitoba politics. MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS Acting Manitoba Liberal Leader Cindy Lamoureux. As the ruling NDP continues to ride high in public-opinion polls, it's the PCs' turn to reflect and rebuild. In time, inevitably, they will rise again; such is the cyclical nature of the process in a province in which politics is essentially a two-party affair. But there is another entity seeking to undergo a period of reflection and, hopefully, eventual rebirth. And for the Liberal Party of Manitoba, the issues at hand are of a more urgently existential nature. Rather than 'What's next?' the future-focused question for Manitoba Liberals is more along the lines of 'Is there one?' As the party readies for the search for its next leader, it must grapple with the fact its lone elected member — Tyndall Park MLA Cindy Lamoureux — does not want the job. 'After much consideration,' she said in a statement released last week, 'I have made the decision to not pursue the leadership. I will continue to focus my attention on serving the constituents of Tyndall Park and will remain on as the interim leader until a new leader has been elected by the party membership.' That leaves the Liberals in the unenviable position of heading toward the next provincial election — which is expected in October 2027 — with a leader who does not hold a seat in the house and, based on recent electoral history, has at best a middling chance of winning one. Wednesdays Columnist Jen Zoratti looks at what's next in arts, life and pop culture. 'We've had some rough times (but) we still are a viable party,' party president Terry Hayward said last week. 'A bit reduced, I would admit that.' In fact, it has been decades since the Liberals' role in Manitoba politics has been anything but reduced. The modern-history high point came in 1988 when, under the leadership of Sharon Carstairs (and thanks largely to the unpopularity of then-premier Howard Pawley's NDP), the Liberals secured 20 seats and served as official Opposition to Gary Filmon's minority PC government. The brush with relevance was short-lived, however; the next two votes (1990 and 1995) resulted in Tory majorities, and as then-NDP leader Gary Doer strategically pushed his party from the political left to the centre, the Liberal seat count dwindled from 20 to seven to three and, by 1999, to a single seat. Since the turn of the century, Manitoba Liberals have not held more than three seats in the legislature. The nature of modern Manitoba politics is that whichever party, PC or NDP, wins power does so by presenting a moderate version of its ideology to voters in the city of Winnipeg, where elections here are won or lost. And with centre-left and centre-right positions effectively staked out, there's simply no ideological real estate remaining for what's supposed to be this province's middle-ground alternative. That's the existential challenge facing whomever seeks and wins the leadership of the Liberal Party. And despite Hayward's assurance that 'there is a needed third voice here in Manitoba,' it's currently difficult to discern which route a return to relevance might follow, and what that voice would sound like.

Lone Liberal MLA won't seek leadership
Lone Liberal MLA won't seek leadership

Winnipeg Free Press

time13-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Winnipeg Free Press

Lone Liberal MLA won't seek leadership

Manitoba's lone Liberal MLA says she won't seek leadership of the provincial party. 'After much consideration I have made the decision to not pursue the leadership of the Manitoba Liberal Party at this time,' Cindy Lamoureux, the member for Tyndall Park, said in a news release. Lamoureux has served as interim leader of the Manitoba Liberals since party leader Dougald Lamont lost his St. Boniface seat in the 2023 provincial election to NDP candidate Robert Loiselle. 'I will continue to focus my attention on serving the constituents of Tyndall Park and will remain on as the interim leader until a new leader has been elected by the party membership,' Lamoureux said. 'I appreciate all the support that I have received from the party, family, friends and others.'

Manitoba pharmacists can soon prescribe birth control
Manitoba pharmacists can soon prescribe birth control

CTV News

time16-05-2025

  • Health
  • CTV News

Manitoba pharmacists can soon prescribe birth control

Pharmacists in Manitoba will soon be able to prescribe birth control. Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara confirmed the plans during question period at the Manitoba legislature on Wednesday, following an exchange with Liberal MLA Cindy Lamoureux. Lamoureux asked Asagwara if the province would enable and empower physicians to assess and prescribe contraception. 'The short answer to that question for the member for Tyndall Park is yes. That is a very reasonable expansion of scope for pharmacists in Manitoba,' Asagwara said. 'We want pharmacists who graduate in our great province to know that right here, in their own province, they can practice to their full scope and that their scope is going to be enhanced.' In Manitoba, prescriptions for birth control products are typically handled by a doctor or nurse practitioner. Lamoureux noted that in British Columbia, pharmacists have had the ability to prescribe contraceptives for more than a year. Asagwara said the government is working on the necessary regulatory and legislative changes to make it possible in Manitoba.

Manitoba pharmacists will soon be able to prescribe birth control, HIV medication: NDP
Manitoba pharmacists will soon be able to prescribe birth control, HIV medication: NDP

Winnipeg Free Press

time16-05-2025

  • Health
  • Winnipeg Free Press

Manitoba pharmacists will soon be able to prescribe birth control, HIV medication: NDP

The Manitoba government is pledging to give pharmacists more powers to prescribe medications, including birth control, directly to clients starting this summer. 'We've been waiting for this for a very long time,' said Marianna Pozdirca, a board member at Pharmacists Manitoba. 'We have a health-care system that is strained and we have over 1,000 pharmacists in the province who are educated to do more than dispensing.' Pozdirca and her pharmacist colleagues have approval to write prescriptions for a small list of minor ailments, ranging from acne to oral thrush, at present. Their full range of skills and consulting rooms, which are used for related assessments and immunizations, are underutilized right now, she said. Pharmacists-in-training in every province except Quebec take a standardized licensing exam, yet Alberta and Saskatchewan have wider scopes of practice than Manitoba, an online database run by the Canadian Pharmacists Association said. Manitoba's lone Liberal MLA, Cindy Lamoureux, raised the restrictions on these health-care providers' abilities in question period Wednesday. MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS MLA Cindy Lamoureux noted that counterparts in B.C. have the power to assess and prescribe birth control. MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS MLA Cindy Lamoureux noted that counterparts in B.C. have the power to assess and prescribe birth control. 'If pharmacists had more prescribing authority, wait times in clinics and emergency rooms could go down,' the MLA for Tyndall Park told the house. Lamoureux noted counterparts in B.C. — the first province to start covering oral hormone pills, Plan B and related contraceptives in April 2023 — have the power to assess and prescribe birth control. Asked about whether Manitoba would follow suit, Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara issued a straightforward reply: 'Yes.' 'That is a very reasonable expansion of scope for pharmacists in Manitoba. We want pharmacists who graduate in our great province to know that right here, in their own province, they can practise to their full scope and that their scope is going to be enhanced,' Asagwara responded. Speaking with pharmacists gathered in the public gallery, the health minister said they want to make Manitoba a leader in leveraging the health workers' wide-ranging education. A number of regulatory and legislative changes need to be made, Asagwara added. A provincial spokesperson later confirmed the government is working on regulatory changes that will allow pharmacists to prescribe birth control and some HIV medications. Pharmacists should be able to start prescribing birth control in the coming weeks, the spokesperson said, adding that the remaining expansion is anticipated this summer. Pozdirca said pharmacists are cautiously optimistic because they've heard similar rhetoric during previous legislative sessions. Ultimately, significant updates would be beneficial for everyone because they would expand access to primary care and alleviate administrative burden on physicians, she said. 'We're not looking to be siloed off from other health-care professions. We are all part of the circle of care for patients,' the pharmacist added. Pharmacists Manitoba is advocating for enhanced assessment powers, as well as provincial coverage for more evaluations to reduce barriers for patients, especially those who do not have a family doctor or live in rural and remote communities. Manitobans must pay for almost all assessments that pharmacists can provide — even if they are free of charge at a family doctor's office or walk-in clinic. Alternatively, pharmacies have to absorb those costs. Winnipeg Jets Game Days On Winnipeg Jets game days, hockey writers Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe send news, notes and quotes from the morning skate, as well as injury updates and lineup decisions. Arrives a few hours prior to puck drop. These health-care providers are reimbursed for certain drugs and dispensing fees in Manitoba. They can only charge the province for assessing uncomplicated bladder infections. Smokers in the province are eligible for free cessation-related counselling, owing to a unique social impact bond model set up by the former Progressive Conservative government. 'If we're going to allow pharmacists to prescribe for birth control or for anything else, they need to be reimbursed for their time fairly,' PC health critic Kathleen Cook said Friday. Cook noted the Tories campaigned on further expanding pharmacists' scope of practice during the 2023 election campaign. She urged the health minister to continue growing these providers' ability to prescribe to align Manitoba with other jurisdictions. Pharmacists are scheduled to meet with representatives from Asagwara's office next week. Maggie MacintoshEducation reporter Maggie Macintosh reports on education for the Free Press. Originally from Hamilton, Ont., she first reported for the Free Press in 2017. Read more about Maggie. Funding for the Free Press education reporter comes from the Government of Canada through the Local Journalism Initiative. Every piece of reporting Maggie produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Manitoba pharmacists will soon have ability to prescribe birth control, HIV medications
Manitoba pharmacists will soon have ability to prescribe birth control, HIV medications

CBC

time16-05-2025

  • Health
  • CBC

Manitoba pharmacists will soon have ability to prescribe birth control, HIV medications

Pharmacists in Manitoba will soon be able to prescribe birth control, the province's health minister revealed this week in an announcement that came as a pleasant surprise to the industry. Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara told the legislature Wednesday that granting pharmacists the means to assess and prescribe contraceptives is a "very reasonable expansion of scope for pharmacists in Manitoba." The minister added in an interview the government is moving "very quickly" on the changes, which will take effect "in the coming days and weeks." "We're trying to get it out the door as quickly as we can for pharmacists across the province who have been asking for this for years," they said. Pharmacists will also be able to prescribe HIV medications beginning this summer, a government official said. Manitoba, Ontario and the three territories are the only places in Canada that do not currently allow pharmacists to prescribe birth control. Emergency contraceptives, such as the Plan B pill, are currently available without a prescription from pharmacies. "Right now in Manitoba, pharmacists do not have the ability to practise at their full scope, the way that they should," said Asagwara, who pledged "to go even further" in granting pharmacists more prescribing authority. Pharmacists Manitoba welcomes change Members of the industry association Pharmacists Manitoba were in the legislature to watch question period Wednesday, after they were informed that Liberal MLA Cindy Lamoureux would ask questions about pharmacists' scope of practice. In her first question, Lamoureux asked if the government planned to "enable and empower pharmacists who directly assess and prescribe contraception." The question prompted a sometimes rare occurrence in question period: a direct answer to the question posed. "The short answer to that question, for the member of Tyndall Park, is yes," Asagwara said. Britt Kural, the pharmacy practice adviser with Pharmacists Manitoba, said she was "pleasantly surprised" by the response. "We had no idea that there was going to be something right around the corner," said Kural. The pharmacist said she believes she and her colleagues will be able to prescribe products like daily oral birth control pills, hormonal injections and IUDs, but the province hasn't provided those details yet. Currently, a patient must go to a doctor's office or a nurse practitioner to receive a prescription for birth control, and must then visit a pharmacist to pick it up. This regulatory change will save patients from seeing a doctor or nurse practitioner. "Quite often pharmacists are a first point of care for many people in Manitoba, because they don't have access to a primary care physician or a nurse practitioner, especially in rural and remote communities," Kural said. She couldn't estimate what kind of uptake pharmacists will see, but said her profession is eager to help. Women's Health Clinic executive director Kemlin Nembhard said any step toward making prescription birth control more accessible is worth celebrating. The change will make contraceptives easier to access for people without a family doctor, or for young people who worry about their parents finding out, she said. While Manitoba's NDP government has been offering free prescription birth control since October of last year, Nembhard said some hurdles to accessing these contraceptives persist, such as the requirement to have a health card. It's one of the reasons the clinic runs a free birth control program, funded entirely through donations. "It would be great for us to get funding through the province to support that program," Nembhard said. Kural said Manitoba's pharmacists would like to further expand their prescribing authority. Some options could include prescriptions to treat the minor ailments pharmacists are already assessing, such as strep throat, ear infections and cold sores, Kural said. Any such move would require regulatory changes from the province.

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