Bill 60 | |
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Quebec National Assembly | |
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Citation | Bill 60 |
Territorial extent | Province of Quebec |
The Charter of Quebec Values (French: Charte de la laïcité or Charte des valeurs québécoises) was Bill 60 in the Canadian province of Quebec, introduced by the governing Parti Québécois in 2013 under Premier Pauline Marois, trying to legislate the Quebec controversy on reasonable accommodation. The PQ cabinet member forwarding the bill was Bernard Drainville, Minister responsible for Democratic Institutions and Active Citizenship.[1] Premier Marois also threatened invoking the notwithstanding clause of the Constitution of Canada to pass the Charter in 2013.[2] There was much controversy in Quebec and elsewhere about the charter, especially its proposed prohibition of public sector employees from wearing or displaying conspicuous religious symbols.[3]
The proposal would have included the following provisions:
The PQ had a minority government; Marois called an early election to obtain a greater vote of confidence.[4] The political objective of the PQ was to foster an alliance between seemingly opposing groups, the traditionalists and the progressives, in order to facilitate the emergence of a new type of majority.[5] The bill died as of the 2014 election,[6] which was won by the Quebec Liberal Party. The Charter of Quebec Values was argued to be a contributing factor in the PQ’s loss of power (although the bill was polled with higher public opinion support than the governing party itself).[7] The Liberals were opposed to the legislation, but party leader Philippe Couillard pledged during the campaign to put forward a less strict set of measures on the reasonable accommodation issue.[8]