Secular charter would be shredded by court, lawyer says - Action News
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Montreal

Secular charter would be shredded by court, lawyer says

A prominent constitutional lawyer says a plan by the Parti Quebecois to restrict certain religious symbols in public institutions would be shredded up in court.
Parti Qubecois leader Pauline Marois wants to introduce a secular charter if her government is elected but does not plan on removing the crucifix from the National Assembly. (CBC)

A prominent constitutional lawyer says a plan by the Parti Quebecois to restrict certain religious symbols in public institutions would be shredded up in court.

Julius Grey used the example of doctors with religious headwear and said that if they one day challenge the PQ proposal, they will win.

The PQ has proposed a Charter of Secularism that would forbid employees in public institutions from wearing overt religious symbols; the policy would not apply to necklaces, like the crucifix.

"Imagine the absurdity of saying that we have the best surgeon in Quebec, but he can't operate in Quebec because he's not permitted to wear his kippah, turban or scarf," Grey said in an interview.

"I think a doctor would succeed I think there's no reason for a doctor not to wear a turban, kippah or scarf."

Grey cited jurisprudence that could be used to knock down the PQ proposal, including the famous case of turbans in the RCMP.

He said any Quebec public servant who would launch a legal challenge would also be successful.

"I don't see why a civil servant who works in a department should be deprived of his rights," he said in an interview from Victoria. "It's very likely that in the vast majority of cases there would be accommodation ordered by the courts."

He said a future PQ government would then have only one tool left in its legal arsenal the notwithstanding clause, which allows legislation to temporarily override parts of the Constitution.

But Grey says that move would be a political hornet's nest.

"The notwithstanding clause cannot be applied without causing years of contestation," he said. When a government uses the clause to protect legislation, it expires after five years. That would force a future government to go through the process of re-introducing the controversial law.

The Quebec constitutional expert said the notwithstanding clause is there for extreme situations and emergencies not for a doctor in a yarmulke.

The PQ is leading in the public-opinion polls with a provincial election less than three weeks away. Quebecers vote on Sept. 4.

With an eye on the Quebec election campaign, Grey said the opinion of the majority should not be used to determine the rights of minorities.

Grey added that there might be some cases where wearing religious symbols could be forbidden, like for judges or Crown prosecutors.

A court might find it "reasonable and proper" to legislate clothing for judges and other people whose neutrality is central to their job, Grey said.

The Montreal lawyer has in the past successfully argued landmark constitutional cases against Quebec's language law, and against a school's decision to forbid a Sikh boy from wearing the kirpan dagger.