National Post

Systemic racism hearings in Quebec polarizing

Political left divided on intent and impact

- Giuseppe Valiante

MONTREAL • Quebec is being widely criticized for its plan to launch public consultati­ons on systemic racism, even by those who agree visible minorities face many structural barriers in the province.

The debate has highlighte­d a deep divide among Quebec’s political left, with some people saying the consultati­ons encourage an ideology of victimhood and demonize the province as inherently racist.

Some civil rights activists argue the consultati­ons are meaningles­s unless the government is ready to hold institutio­ns accountabl­e for failing to uphold racial diversity. Moreover, activists say they’ll increasing­ly use the courts to push through changes in society regardless of what comes out of the government’s consultati­ons.

Michele Sirois, a political scientist and president of a women’s rights organizati­on, believes there is no systemic racism in Quebec.

That concept, she explained in an interview, is imported from the United States, which has a history of structural racism against people of colour.

“The Americans had a slave trade,” she said. “We didn’t. Our problem is about the full integratio­n of immigrants.”

Sirois recently penned an opinion piece in Le Devoir, a left-of-centre newspaper, and wrote that the term “systemic racism” reflects “an ideology of victimhood” and promotes the idea that only white people can be racist.

“The left is divided in Quebec,” Sirois said in the interview. “And there is an increase of people on the left who are saying, ‘ stop these consultati­ons, which will only increase racial tension in society.’”

Only discussion on discrimina­tion involving race, colour or ethnic and national origin will be allowed when the hearings begin in September.

The goal, the government said, is to forge “concrete and durable” solutions in order to “fight these problems.”

The Canadian Press attempted to contact provincial Immigratio­n Minister Kathleen Weil, whose office is leading the consultati­ons, but was told she would not be available to comment.

Weil said in July, when she first made the announceme­nt, that the consultati­ons “are an occasion to mobilize all of civil society ... to propose actions to eliminate the obstacles towards full participat­ion of all Quebecers.”

Fo Niemi, executive director for the Montreal- based Centre for Research Action on Race Relations, said those on the right and the left who deny the existence of systemic racism aren’t looking hard enough.

One clear example, he said, is that Quebec’s human rights commission is so understaff­ed, it can render decisions only many years after a complaint is lodged.

Niemi cited the case of a young man who waited seven years to be awarded $33,000 by the commission after he was racially profiled by Montreal police in 2010.

That case also highlighte­d the fact police are still not tracking data on racial profiling, five years after the force said it would start taking profiling complaints against its officers seriously.

“The system knows that going to the human rights commission is like going to a nameless graveyard,” Niemi said. “This is a systemic problem.”

Another example of systemic racism in Quebec society is reflected in the lack of diversity in the judiciary, he said.

Niemi pointed to a 2016 study published by the Institute for Research on Public Policy indicating that out of 500 judges in Quebec, three were visible minorities.

Niemi said activists are increasing­ly going to the courts to force society to become more diverse, because nothing else seems to be working. “It’s inevitable,” he said. “It’s only a matter of time before some of these legal actions start to take place. Quebec is a bit slower in terms of this kind of litigation, but it’s coming and we are leading that movement for change.”

Forgotten in the upcoming discussion is Quebec’s anglophone population, said Sylvia Martin-Laforge, director of the Quebec Community Groups Network.

She notes the consultati­ons specifical­ly do not touch on discrimina­tion based on language.

Laforge said many people in Quebec’s English-speaking community are people of colour from the Caribbean islands, adding that the province’s civil service is comprised of a fraction of anglophone­s compared to their numbers in the general population. She also deplored the fact that the government’s documents outlining the consultati­ons have so far been released in French only.

A MATTER OF TIME BEFORE SOME OF THESE LEGAL ACTIONS START TO TAKE PLACE.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Michele Sirois, a political scientist and president of a women’s rights organizati­on, believes there is no systemic racism in Quebec. But others say it definitely exists and the province needs to act on it.
RYAN REMIORZ / THE CANADIAN PRESS Michele Sirois, a political scientist and president of a women’s rights organizati­on, believes there is no systemic racism in Quebec. But others say it definitely exists and the province needs to act on it.

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