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Manitoba targets Quebec civil servants with recruitment campaign in wake of religious symbols ban

November 28, 2019
By Steve Lambert


The welcome sign posted at the Manitoba-Ontario border. Photo: Google Streetview

WINNIPEG (CP) – The Manitoba government is taking out newspaper and electronic advertisements in Quebec that welcome civil servants there to move to Manitoba if they feel threatened by their province’s ban on religious symbols in the workplace.

The ads, which are to start rolling out Thursday, are the latest overt criticism of the legislation from Premier Brian Pallister, who has raised the issue at meetings with his fellow premiers.

“Here in Manitoba, we have respect for diversity,” Pallister said Wednesday in an interview with The Canadian Press.

“We respect personal freedoms and rights, and we’re not big on clothing police here.”

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The Quebec law bans some public-sector employees, including teachers and police officers, from wearing religious symbols such as hijabs for Muslim women and yarmulkes for Jewish men in the workplace.

Quebec Premier Francois Legault has defended the legislation as a legitimate way to ensure secularism in the public sector. He has said the law is supported by Quebecers.

Pallister said Manitoba has a shortage of bilingual employees in some areas of its civil service. The ads allude to 21 reasons to consider a move to Manitoba – a play on Quebec’s Bill 21 before it became law.

The budget for an initial round of ads is about $20,000, Pallister said, with more to follow depending on how they are received.

Is Pallister concerned about ticking off the Quebec government?

“It’s too late for that. I understand that the premier feels he’s well within his rights in Quebec to go with something that’s popular,” Pallister said.

“I don’t see this … as right, whether it’s popular or not.”

In July, Pallister wrote letters to Quebec professional organizations, colleges and other entities to invite public-sector workers to move west. There was no take-up on that offer.

“At this time there have been no specific responses or inquiries from those organizations,” read a written statement from Manitoba’s civil service commission.

Pallister and his Progressive Conservative government introduced a resolution in the Manitoba legislature Wednesday that promoted the rights of public servants and other people to exercise religious freedom.

While the resolution did not specifically mention Quebec, it expressed opposition to “any law that seeks to unjustifiably limit the religious freedoms of citizens, including passing a law that unjustifiably denies an individual’s right to wear religious clothing or symbols of one’s choice.”

The resolution is a non-binding expression of the collective will of legislature members. The Ontario legislature passed a similar resolution earlier this month.

Manitoba’s Opposition New Democrats supported the idea and proposed an amendment that they said would strengthen the wording, in part by expressing support for a constitutional challenge of the Quebec law.

“Any policy, any legislation, any ruling that is based upon how you look or what faith you practise, is not right,” NDP heritage critic Diljeet Brar told the chamber.


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