The Niagara Falls Review

Profane pro-Trump protest sign OK, court rules

The ability to protest publicly, even using vulgar language, is an essential part of democratic process

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO — A Donald Trump supporter had every right to brandish a profane protest sign in a busy public park on a summer’s day at Niagara Falls, Ontario’s top court ruled on Monday.

In quashing a trespass notice issued to Fredrick Bracken, the Court of Appeal said the ability to protest publicly — even using vulgar language — is an essential part of the democratic process.

“In a free society, individual­s are permitted to use open public spaces to address the people assembled there, to challenge each other, and to call government to account,” the Appeal Court said. “The idea that the parks are somehow different — that they are categorica­lly a ’safe space’ where people are to be protected from exposure to political messages — is antithetic­al to a free and democratic society and would set a dangerous precedent.”

At the same time, the court upheld the constituti­onality of a rule barring park users from abusive behaviour that could interfere with the enjoyment of other users. The provision, the court found, was a reasonable restrictio­n on free speech.

The case arose in August 2016 in the run-up to the presidenti­al election in the United States. Bracken, of Fort Erie, Ont., was in a park near the falls holding up a sign reading: “Trump is right. F-k China. F-k Mexico.”

Niagara Parks police decided the sign was offensive and disturbing visitors. Officers told Bracken he could not display the sign and told him to leave.

A couple of days later, Bracken went to the Parks police headquarte­rs, where he was told that if he returned to the park with the sign, he would be removed under trespassin­g laws.

He turned to the courts, seeking a declaratio­n that parks rules prohibitin­g “abusive or insulting language” that interferes with other park users was unconstitu­tional, and that the oral trespass notice police gave him had violated his free speech rights.

In September 2016, Superior Court Justice James Ramsay ruled that constituti­onally guaranteed freedom of expression does not apply to shouting insulting or abusive language in parks. However, Ramsay declined to rule on the validity of the oral trespass notice because he was not satisfied police had actually issued such a notice.

Bracken turned to the Court of Appeal, which decided Ramsay was mistaken to conclude that park rules did not infringe on free speech. The judge was also wrong in deciding police had not issued a trespass notice so there was nothing to quash, the Appeal Court found.

For their part, Niagara Parks police and Niagara Parks Commission tried to argue that the parks are intended to be a place of refuge where users can experience natural beauty without the distractio­n of potentiall­y divisive expression. However, the higher court found the plaza where Bracken was protesting was a busy, partly commercial area where neither quiet nor an absence of distractio­n was possible.

At the same time, the court upheld the law itself on the grounds that it aims to prevent individual­s and groups from using public spaces in a way that makes them unfit for others to use. When the line is crossed must be decided on a case-bycase basis and, the Appeal Court said, Bracken in no way went too far.

“The public is not required to endure personaliz­ed invective, but nothing in the sign’s message could be characteri­zed in this way,” the Appeal Court said. “The display of the sign, despite its profanity, did not constitute the use of insulting or abusive language.”

In November 2016, police arrested Bracken, then 39, during a similar protest at Brock University. He was charged with assaulting a student and making offensive racial comments.

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