National Post

NDP CANDIDATES FACE OFF DURING DEBATE IN MONTREAL.

- Morgan Lowrie

• The four NDP leadership hopefuls tread carefully on Sunday when they were asked to weigh in on Quebec’s ongoing discussion over religion and identity during a French-language debate in Montreal.

Manitoba MP Niki Ashton, Quebec MP Guy Caron, Ontario MP Charlie Angus and Ontario legislatur­e member Jagmeet Singh were asked about the Quebec government’s proposed legislatio­n that sets guidelines for accommodat­ing religious requests.

The bill attempts to enshrine into law the policy that all people giving or receiving a service from the state must do so with their face uncovered.

Caron chose to tackle the issue in his opening statement, saying it was important to fight racism and Islamophob­ia but also to support Quebec’s right to make its own decisions on the issue.

“Rejecting secularism because we believe it’s just racism is fundamenta­lly misunderst­anding Quebec,” he told a packed room at Montreal’s Club Soda.

Singh, who has said he is against the bill, said he doesn’t believe the state should be able to dictate what people wear, but added he believes the province has laws in place to ensure rights are protected.

In his opening statement, he also appeared to acknowledg­e critics’ fears that Quebec voters will reject him due to his own visible symbols of faith.

“I’m not here to convince you to accept my turban, nor my beard,” said Singh, who is Sikh. “What I want to convince you is that I’m someone who shares the same values as you.”

Ashton and Angus also disagreed with the idea that the state should be able to dictate what a person wears but refrained from criticizin­g the Quebec government.

“It’s absolutely essential that we stand up for humans rights and the people’s freedom. It’s also important we respect Quebec,” Ashton said.

Angus expressed a similar sentiment, saying it was important to understand’s Quebec’s fight for the separation of church and state during the quiet revolution of the 1960s.

“I’m confident that the conversati­on in Quebec will result in a balance between the rights of individual­s and the need to maintain the secularism of society,” he told reporters following the debate, while declining to state exactly where the line should be drawn.

The question of religion and identity was a thorny issue for the NDP in the last federal election, and one that may have contribute­d to the party’s slide in a province that had previously helped vault it to official Opposition status. Thomas Mulcair’s insistence that women should have a right to wear a veil at citizenshi­p ceremonies is believed by some to have cost the party crucial support.

Party members will vote for Mulcair’s successor on Sept. 18.

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