Ottawa Citizen

Premier rebuffs call to drop gender identity from sex ed

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

The Ontario government will not move forward with a proposed policy that called for gender identity references to be removed from the sexual-education curriculum, Premier Doug Ford said Monday after the issue surfaced at a weekend gathering of his Progressiv­e Conservati­ve party.

Parental rights advocate and prominent social conservati­ve Tanya Granic Allen had put forward a resolution Saturday that called gender identity a “Liberal ideology” and asked that references to it be deleted from the sex-ed curriculum that’s currently being revamped by Ford’s government.

Delegates at the convention had voted in favour of having Granic Allen’s resolution debated at next year’s policy gathering, prompting critics to call on Ford to denounce the entire idea.

On Monday, Ford stressed that Saturday’s vote on Granic Allen’s resolution was non-binding.

“It came from the floor,” he said. “I’m not moving forward with that. So, it’s done.”

Ford’s office followed up on his remarks with a brief statement saying the premier will “explore every option as Leader of the Ontario PC Party to prevent this resolution from moving forward.”

Education Minister Lisa Thompson also stressed that the gender identity resolution at the weekend convention “has nothing at all to do with government policy.”

“It was a resolution put forward to impact a policy convention that is a year from now,” she said, adding that she’s interested in providing a “safe and support environmen­t” for all students.

Granic Allen — who has raised concerns about social conservati­ve voices being ignored in the party — said Monday that she introduced the resolution on gender identity because Ford talked about the issue during his run for the Tory leadership.

“Doug says he listens to the people,” she said. “Is he going to listen to the people? I don’t know ... I’m just following Doug’s lead on this issue.”

Ford promised both during his run for the Tory leadership earlier this year and during the spring election campaign to repeal and replace the sex-ed curriculum, saying parents had not been adequately consulted.

He scrapped the modernized curriculum shortly after taking office and said teachers would use a document previously updated in 1998.

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