Times Colonist

Speaker of Ontario legislatur­e stands by keffiyeh ban

- ALLISON JONES and LIAM CASEY

TORONTO — The Speaker of Ontario’s legislatur­e is standing by a ruling that bans people in the building from wearing keffiyehs, which he says are being worn to make a political statement, even after the premier and all opposition parties asked him to reverse it.

The legislatur­e has a longstandi­ng rule that members can’t use props, signage or accessorie­s intended to express a political statement, and Speaker Ted Arnott said after “extensive research” he has concluded that keffiyehs meet that definition.

A keffiyeh is a checkered scarf typically worn in Arab cultures that has come to symbolize solidarity with Palestinia­ns.

“It’s extremely politicall­y sensitive, obviously, but procedural­ly I believe I made the right decision in the sense of past rulings of speakers and precedents and traditions,” Arnott said Thursday after question period.

“In my opinion, having done the research, it appeared to me that the keffiyeh is being worn to make a political statement.”

Members of provincial parliament often ask special permission to wear an item that may break the rules, such as ribbons for a particular cause’s awareness day, and they do that by seeking unanimous consent of the legislatur­e.

NDP Leader Marit Stiles moved a unanimous consent motion on Thursday saying the keffiyeh is a culturally significan­t clothing item in Palestinia­n, Muslim and Arab communitie­s and should be allowed in the house, but Arnott said he heard a few people say “no.”

The loudest “no” came from Progressiv­e Conservati­ve backbenche­r Robin Martin.

“I think [Arnott’s ruling] is the correct decision, in the same way we can’t use other kinds of political clothing,” Martin said after question period.

“We can’t wear T-shirts that say, ‘Free the hostages’ or wrap ourselves in a flag or whatever. We have to follow the rules of the legislatur­e. Otherwise, we politicize the entire debate inside the legislatur­e and that’s not what it’s about. We use our words to persuade, not our items of clothes.”

Martin’s position was in contrast to her leader’s, with Premier Doug Ford calling on the Speaker to reverse his decision.

“It really comes down to uniting Ontarians and communitie­s,” the premier said Thursday at an unrelated news conference.

“We see the division right now that’s going on. It’s not healthy, and this will just divide the community even more.”

The National Council of Canadian Muslims also called on the Speaker to remove the ban.

“Banning the keffiyeh from the Ontario legislatur­e is another sign that Palestinia­n identity is being attacked today, including in our halls of power,” the group said.

The issue came to Stiles’ attention last week when one of her staffers, who wears a keffiyeh every day, had to remove it before entering the building.

The Legislativ­e Protective Service told the staffer to remove the keffiyeh, she said.

Arnott said that the issue came up a few weeks ago, when a member of provincial parliament — he would not say who — brought to his attention that Sarah Jama, who sits as an independen­t, was wearing a keffiyeh.

Jama was elected in a byelection last year as a New Democrat, but Stiles kicked her out of the caucus in the fall after a series of events that began with a statement by Jama on the IsraelHama­s war that failed to mention or condemn the attack on Israeli civilians.

The ouster came after a series of moves from Jama that either publicly defied Stiles or caught her unaware.

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