Earl Amyotte

Earl Amyotte is a veteran Canadian pro-life activist. In 1984, he led the unregistered Pro-Life Party of Canada. Later, he sought provincial office as a candidate of the Family Coalition Party. Amyotte lived in Windsor, Ontario, and worked at a bank in Detroit, Michigan, USA during the 1980s and early 1990s. A newspaper report from 1995 lists him as retired (Windsor Star, 5 May 1995).

Pro-life Party of Canada
The leadership of the Pro-Life Party of Canada tried to register their party with Elections Canada in 1984, but ultimately decided against fielding candidates. Amyotte said the party did not have the "time, effort or money" to field the fifty candidates required for official status. He was also quoted as saying, "We would need a war chest … and also the fact is we are still working on a platform. We would have to take a position on things like Petro-Canada and inflation and that takes time and effort" (Globe and Mail, 18 July 1984).

Campaign Life
Amyotte served as director of the pro-life group Campaign Life in the late 1980s, and began a controversial policy of picketing the private homes of doctors who perform abortions (Windsor Star, 21 September 1989). In early 1990, he was found guilty of blocking a Michigan abortion clinic as part of a human chain organized by the group Operation Rescue. He later served a 25-day voluntary work program (Windsor Star, 1 September 1990). In relation to this controversy, Amyotte was quoted as saying, "For too long, pro-life groups have been respectable. They meet, eat and retreat. Some of us say no - we have to break the law" (Grand Rapids Press, 26 November 1990).

Political pursuit
He first campaigned for the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in the 1990 provincial election, and received 889 votes in Windsor—Riverside for a fourth-place finish against Dave Cooke of the New Democratic Party. He was 57 years old at the time of the election (Windsor Star, 24 August 1990). During the campaign, he said that the views of major parties on the abortions issue had been conditioned by "feminists of the sabre-toothed variety" (Windsor Star, 27 August 1990).

He campaigned in Windsor—Sandwich in the 1995 provincial election, and received 610 votes (2.41%) for a fourth-place finish against Sandra Pupatello of the Ontario Liberal Party.

Catholics United for Life
In 1991 Earl formed the southeast Michigan branch of Catholics United for Life, headquartered in New Hope Kentucky, USA. This group meets weekly at the site of several abortion clinics to pray and give witness. The group also gathers in church to give adoration and pray for the end of abortion.

He has also taken graphic photographs of aborted fetuses to protests on several occasions. Some of these photographs were briefly seized by customs officials as obscene material in 2002. Canada Customs later ruled that they were not obscene under the criminal code, and returned them (Broadcast News, 9 April 2002).

Earl was born in 1933 and went to his Eternal Reward at 2:00 am on February 2, 2007.