Montreal Gazette

Women’s group continues to lose members

Resolution on sex work splits organizati­on

- GIUSEPPE VALIANTE

Quebec’s most prominent women’s group continues to lose members after it passed a resolution last month recognizin­g that women can freely choose to become sex workers. The resolution approved by members of the Federation des femmes du Quebec has split the organizati­on between prostituti­on abolitioni­sts and those who believe women can consent to sexual activity in exchange for money. Diane Matte, founder of the group CLES, which works with current and former sex workers, said the federation’s position is “incompatib­le with the work we’ve done over the past 18 years to fight sexual exploitati­on.” Whether there are women who believe they can enter freely into the sex industry is the wrong question to ask, said Matte, whose organizati­on was among three groups that announced Wednesday they are leaving the federation. “The question is rather, as a society that believes in equality of all women, do we support an industry that is sustained by poverty, social inequality and the violence that women face in it?” MCVI, a group that advocates on behalf of sexual-assault victims, as well as the Maison d’Haiti, a prominent organizati­on in Montreal’s Haitian community, also quit the federation Wednesday. Matte said at least two branches of the Confederat­ion of National Trade Unions previously announced they will no longer be part of the women’s federation. Messages seeking comment from federation president Gabrielle Bouchard were not returned Wednesday afternoon. Bouchard told The Canadian Press in October the “large majority” of voters at the group’s general assembly supported the motion, but some “were upset.” Matte said she is “pessimisti­c” about the future of the federation, which was formed in 1966. “We weren’t the first to leave and we won’t be the last,” she said in an interview.

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