Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Toronto Public Library Under Fire Over Event By Controversial Speaker Meghan Murphy

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Oct, 2019 06:23 PM

    TORONTO - The Toronto Public Library is coming under fire over its refusal to cancel an event featuring a speaker who has made controversial remarks about transgender women.

     

    An online petition that has gathered more than 2,400 signatures says the library is providing a platform for Meghan Murphy to spread hate speech.

     

    Its organizers, authors Alicia Elliott, Catherine Hernandez and Carrianne Leung, say they will no longer participate in events at the library in light of its decision to allow the event, scheduled to take place on Oct. 29.

     

    "We are shocked that our public institutions we hold in regard would allow Murphy to have a platform while purporting to uphold community values. More than that, we feel betrayed," the petition reads.

     

    "Offering Murphy a platform means denying the resources and promise of safe and equitable space to trans communities."

     

    Murphy, a freelance writer who runs the website "Feminist Current," has written that "allowing men to identify as women" endangers women and undermines women's rights.

     

    She has also said trans women should not be allowed in women's washrooms, writing that "there is absolutely no reason why it is necessary to allow people to access washrooms based on their personality, feelings, or clothing choices, versus their sex."

     

    The library, meanwhile, says it is aware that the event has caused "anger and concern" but maintains it has an obligation to protect free speech.

     

    "We would also suggest that engaging in respectful civil discourse with people of opposing views may be a more productive strategy than abstaining from public library events," it said in a statement.

     

    "Libraries have always been committed to supporting vulnerable communities by welcoming and creating space for different perspectives rather than through censorship."

     

    The organization also says it does not believe Murphy's talk, titled "Gender Identity: What does It Mean for Society, the Law and Women?," violates its rental policy.

     

    The policy says the library can cancel any third-party event that would promote "discrimination, contempt or hatred for any group or person on the basis of race, ethnic origin, place of origin, citizenship, colour, ancestry, language, creed, age, sex, gender identity, gender expression, marital status, family status, sexual orientation, disability, political affiliation, membership in a union or staff association, receipt of public assistance, level of literacy or any other similar factor."

     

    The petition says it is "hard to believe" Murphy's talk will not have the effect of promoting discrimination against trans people.

     

    "Those who want to disseminate hate speech today know that they can misrepresent, then weaponize the phrase 'freedom of speech' in order to get what they want: an audience, and space to speak to and then mobilize that audience against marginalized communities," the site says.

     

    "There is a difference between denying free speech and what is known as deplatforming, which is when you refuse to allow hate speech to be disseminated in your facility."

     

    The Vancouver Public Library faced similar backlash in January when it allowed Murphy to speak at one of its locations. The library was later banned from participating in that city's Pride events, with organizers citing the decision to greenlight Murphy's event.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    MPs Demand More Federal Help As Mental-Health Issues Rise On Canada's Farms

    MPs Demand More Federal Help As Mental-Health Issues Rise On Canada's Farms
    Lawmakers are calling on the federal government to better support Canadian farmers who they say are more at risk of mental-health issues like stress, depression and suicidal thoughts than other segments of the population.

    MPs Demand More Federal Help As Mental-Health Issues Rise On Canada's Farms

    Tories Demand Goodale Explain Delayed Police Call On Prison Sex-Assault Claim

    Tories Demand Goodale Explain Delayed Police Call On Prison Sex-Assault Claim
    The federal correctional agency apologized Friday after facing questions from The Canadian Press about a previous public statement saying it had immediately contacted police about the assault allegations at the Nova Institution in Truro.

    Tories Demand Goodale Explain Delayed Police Call On Prison Sex-Assault Claim

    Gondola For Burnaby, B.C., Mountain Has Preliminary Support From City Council

    Gondola For Burnaby, B.C., Mountain Has Preliminary Support From City Council
    BURNABY, B.C. — Plans for a gondola that could solve a transportation headache to and from Simon Fraser University's campus on Burnaby Mountain have edged closer to reality.

    Gondola For Burnaby, B.C., Mountain Has Preliminary Support From City Council

    Montreal Man Sentenced To Two Years For Killing Of Alzheimer's-Stricken Wife

    MONTREAL — A Montreal man who suffocated his severely ill wife with a pillow has been sentenced to two years less a day in jail.

    Montreal Man Sentenced To Two Years For Killing Of Alzheimer's-Stricken Wife

    Fifth Grey Whale Found Dead On B.C. Coast, DFO Studying Link With U.S. Deaths

     The Department of Fisheries and Oceans says a fifth grey whale has been found dead on British Columbia's coast in what it describes as an "upward trend" from recent years.

    Fifth Grey Whale Found Dead On B.C. Coast, DFO Studying Link With U.S. Deaths

    Canada's Citizenship Oath, Before And After Changes To Include Indigenous Rights

    Canada's Citizenship Oath, Before And After Changes To Include Indigenous Rights
    After a proposed change to recognize Indigenous rights:

    Canada's Citizenship Oath, Before And After Changes To Include Indigenous Rights