Legault would override Charter
QUEBEC • Quebec premierdesignate François Legault says he is prepared to invoke the notwithstanding clause to ensure public officials in positions of authority do not wear religious symbols.
The day after a momentous election victory in which he re-drew Quebec’s political map, Legault said he wants to build a “strong Quebec inside Canada.”
But the first provincial government since the 1960s to be neither Liberal nor Parti Québécois will be strongly nationalist with a focus on the Quebec identity issues that helped bring it to power.
The leader of the Coalition Avenir Québec told a Quebec City news conference he has no intention of softening his controversial campaign promises to reduce annual immigration to Quebec and institute language and values tests for recent arrivals.
Legault said his proposed ban on religious symbols for teachers, judges and police officers is important enough to override protections in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
The outgoing Couillard government’s law prohibiting public-sector workers from wearing face-covering garments already faces a legal challenge.
“I think the vast majority of Quebecers, they would like to have a framework where we say that people in authority positions must not wear religious signs, and if we have to use the notwithstanding clause to apply what the majority of Quebecers want, we will do so,” he said.
His tough stance received approval Tuesday from Marine Le Pen, president of France’s far-right National Rally party (formerly the Front National), who called his policies “lucid” and “firm.”
Legault said that starting next year, 10,000 fewer immigrants will be arriving annually in Quebec, dropping from the current level of 50,000.
“At 40,000 immigrants a year, Quebec will receive more, per capita, than the United States and France,” Legault said in defence of his policy. “Our objective is to better integrate them, teach them French, find them a good job and recognize their diplomas.”
Monday’s election was a blow to the parties that for decades made up Quebec’s political establishment.
Outgoing premier Philippe Couillard’s Liberals, at 32 seats, lost more than half of what they won in 2014 while the PQ, at nine seats, was stripped of its official party status. Both hit all-time lows in the popular vote.
As for the rest of Canada, Legault said it has nothing to worry about because his government will be “collaborative.”
“I think many things can be done between Quebec and Canada regarding the economy. We have common challenges in improving productivity of our companies,” he said.
“I am a pragmatic guy,” Legault said. “We are a pragmatic party.”