Thursday, January 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

Liberals Unveil Plan To Outlaw Transgender Hate Speech, Discrimination

IANS, 17 May, 2016 11:10 AM
    OTTAWA — Transgender Canadians and human-rights champions cheered Tuesday as the Liberal government introduced legislation that would make it against the law to discriminate on the basis of gender identity or expression.
     
    The legislation would, if passed, make it illegal under the Canadian Human Rights Act to prevent someone from getting a job or to discriminate in the workplace on the basis of the gender they identify with or outwardly express.
     
    It would also update the Criminal Code to extend hate speech laws to include gender identity and expression.
     
    Criminal laws would also be updated to make it a hate crime when someone is targeted because of their gender identity or gender expression, meaning judges would have to consider it as an aggravating factor in deciding what sentence to impose.
     
    "We live in a time when discrimination in any form is completely unacceptable," Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould told a news conference Tuesday after introducing the bill.
     
    "This is a message of hope to ensure that we recognize gender identity and gender expression and provide the ability in our country for people to feel safe and secure in who they are."
     
    She said it is necessary to make it unequivocal in law that transgender persons have the right to live free from discrimination, hate propaganda and hate crimes.
     
    The law was introduced on the International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia, and Biphobia.
     
    Ten-year-old Charlie Rickert, who was at Wilson-Raybould's side throughout the news conference, stepped to the podium before a phalanx of cameras and confidently expressed her gratitude to those who had helped bring the bill to the House.
     
    "Thank goodness this bill is passing because it will protect us from...hateful propaganda, assaults, rape — stuff like that," Rickert said.  
     
    "It could protect us and stop the people who would have just gone off and done it in the past and discriminated or assaulted us. Now it could be stopping them and then basically punishing them if they actually do it.
     
    "I feel much safer."
     
    Similar legislation has failed to pass Parliament on multiple occasions, including the most recent attempt last year by NDP MP Randall Garrison, whose bill was gutted in the Senate.
     
    This bill is different, said Garrison — who also stood alongside Wilson-Raybould in a rare display of cross-partisan solidarity — because it's a government bill rather than a private member's bill, which rarely become law.
     
     
    Wilson-Raybould wouldn't say whether Liberal MPs would be allowed to vote their conscience on the bill or be forced to support it. But she did say she hopes to have support from all parties.
     
    "We look forward to have support from all sides of the House to put forward this incredibly important piece of legislation."
     
    Later in the House of Commons, however, Garrison sought to introduce a motion that would have seen the bill passed speedily with the consent of all parties, but was promptly rejected.
     
    Wilson-Raybould also said the law, when passed, would ensure data is collected around violence against transgender Canadians.
     
    A survey conducted by Trans Pulse Project in 2010 showed that out of the almost 500 transgender respondents in Ontario, 20 per cent reported having been physically or sexually assaulted, though not all of them reported the assaults to police.
     
    The respondent-driven sampling survey found 13 per cent reported being fired and 18 per cent refused a job because they were transgender.
     
    Groups including Trans Equality Canada, Amnesty International, the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, and the Canadian Association of University Teachers all praised the move by the Liberals, calling it a long overdue move in the path towards equal rights for all Canadians.
     
    "It's a good first step because that allows for the ability at the federal level to challenge things in court if needed," said Talia Johnson, an Ottawa-based counsellor.
     
    "Any human rights legislation only goes so far, so we need to also work on education so that cases don't have to come forward in the first place. It's often very hard to prove discrimination, especially in employment and other areas like that."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Cop Who Killed Sammy Yatim Seeks To Avoid Mandatory Minimum Prison Sentence

    Cop Who Killed Sammy Yatim Seeks To Avoid Mandatory Minimum Prison Sentence
    Const. James Forcillo has filed a constitutional challenge to the mandatory minimum sentence of four or five years that he faces in the death of 18-year-old Sammy Yatim.

    Cop Who Killed Sammy Yatim Seeks To Avoid Mandatory Minimum Prison Sentence

    Autopsy Underway On Severed Human Remains Found Behind Toronto Butcher Shop

    Autopsy Underway On Severed Human Remains Found Behind Toronto Butcher Shop
    Spokeswoman Cheryl Mahyr says an autopsy of the remains is underway and authorities hope it could shed some light on what might have happened to the victim.

    Autopsy Underway On Severed Human Remains Found Behind Toronto Butcher Shop

    Fire Danger Already Extreme In Parts Of Prairies Where Ground Is Tinder Dry

    Fire Danger Already Extreme In Parts Of Prairies Where Ground Is Tinder Dry
    REGINA — Large swaths of red — meaning extreme risk — cover Alberta and Saskatchewan on the latest fire danger map from Natural Resources Canada.

    Fire Danger Already Extreme In Parts Of Prairies Where Ground Is Tinder Dry

    'Serious' Power Steering Defect Found In Several FCA Vehicles: Transport Canada

    OTTAWA — Transport Canada says it has identified a "serious safety issue" involving the power steering systems on more than 295,000 vehicles sold by Fiat Chrysler Automobiles.

    'Serious' Power Steering Defect Found In Several FCA Vehicles: Transport Canada

    Toronto Police Search For Sniper In Man's Death On Driveway

    Toronto police say they're searching for a sniper who killed a man on a residential driveway last fall using a high-powered rifle. Clinton Yow Foo, 37, died from a single shot in the city's east end in October last year.

    Toronto Police Search For Sniper In Man's Death On Driveway

    'The Sky Is Gonna Be Blue!' Conservatives Win Big Majority In Manitoba Election

    'The Sky Is Gonna Be Blue!' Conservatives Win Big Majority In Manitoba Election
    Brian Pallister's Progressive Conservatives routed Premier Greg Selinger and the New Democrats to put an end to 16 years of the NDP in power.

    'The Sky Is Gonna Be Blue!' Conservatives Win Big Majority In Manitoba Election