I call the meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 99 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights.
Pursuant to the order adopted by the House on February 15, the committee is meeting in public to study the subject matter of the supplementary estimates, 2023-24, under the Department of Justice.
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format. Members are attending in person in the room and remotely using the Zoom application.
Witnesses are all attending in person today. The members attending by video conference have been sound-tested and are aware of our procedure, including interpretation, so I won't go through that lengthy explanation this morning.
I want to inform the members that we're studying the subject matter of the supplementary estimates for the first hour. There will be no votes on the items.
I want to welcome today the Honourable Arif Virani, Minister of Justice and solicitor general of Canada.
It's not solicitor general. Solicitor general was back in the 1980s. The reason I know that is that I was in high school and I participated in the first model Parliament. I was nominated or elected—I don't know if it was a nomination or an election—as the solicitor general. After that, they deleted solicitor general from the books.
Welcome Attorney General.
:
I'm not sure he was even born.
Also, with Minister Virani, we have officials assisting us today.
Thank you for being here.
[Translation]
We have with us Shalene Curtis-Micallef, Deputy Minister and Deputy Attorney General of Canada; Michael Sousa, Senior Assistant Deputy Minister, Policy Sector; Bill Kroll, Chief Financial Officer and Assistant Deputy Minister, Management Sector; and Elizabeth Hendy, Director General, Programs Branch, Policy Sector.
Welcome to you all.
[English]
Thank you all for being with us today.
We will do the normal round of questioning and I will call witnesses.
Before we start, I want to say to the minister and his department that the letter was received from Nova Scotia Legal Aid thanking us for the support of a project for supporting racialized inmates incarcerated in federal and provincial correctional institutions in Nova Scotia. I want to put that on record.
Minister, you're ready to make a statement first. Please proceed.
:
Thank you, Chair, and members of the Committee.
Thank you for inviting me to join you today.
I would like to begin by acknowledging that we are meeting on the traditional unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinaabe Nation.
As I am sure you have seen, a few weeks ago, I introduced Bill , the Online Harms Act. I want to both explain the vital importance of the Online Harms Act and dispel misunderstandings about what it does and doesn't do.
The premise of this legislation is simple: we all expect to be safe in our homes, neighbourhoods and communities. We should be able to expect the same kind of security in our online communities. We need to address the online harms that threaten us, and especially our children, every day.
Let me start by talking about our children.
[English]
There are currently no safety standards mandated for the online platforms that kids use every day. In contrast, my children's LEGO in our basement is subject to rigorous safety standards and testing before my two boys get their hands on it. I know that these days my children spend much more time online than playing with their LEGO. The most dangerous toys in my home right now and in every Canadian home are the screens our children are on. Social media is everywhere. It brings unchecked dangers and horrific content. This, frankly, terrifies me. We need to make the Internet safe for our young people around the country.
As parents, one of the first things we teach all of our kids is how to cross the road. We tell them to wait for the green light. We tell them to look in both directions. We trust our children, but we also have faith in the rules of the road and that drivers will respect the rules of the road. We trust that cars will stop at a red light and obey the speed limit. Safety depends on a basic network of trust. This is exactly what we are desperately lacking in the digital world. The proposed would establish rules of the road for platforms so that we can teach our kids to be safe online, with the knowledge that platforms are also doing their part.
[Translation]
Now, let's talk about hate crimes.
The total number of police-reported hate crimes in Canada has reached its highest level on record, nearly doubling the rate recorded in 2019.
[English]
Police across the country are calling the increase “staggering”. Toronto Police Chief Myron Demkiw said this week that hate crime calls in Toronto have increased by 93% since last October. Communities and law enforcement have been calling on governments to act.
Bill creates a new stand-alone hate crime offence to make sure that hate crimes are properly prosecuted and identified. Under our current legal system, hate motivation for a crime is only considered as an afterthought at the sentencing stage; it is not part of the offence-laying itself. The threshold for criminal hatred is high. Comments that offend, humiliate or insult do not hit the standard of hatred. They are what we call awful but lawful. The definition of hate that we are embedding in the Criminal Code comes straight from the Supreme Court of Canada in the Keegstra and Whatcott decisions. We did not make up the definition of hatred that we are proposing.
It has been disappointing, though not surprising, to see the wildly inaccurate assertions made by some commentators about how sentencing for this new hate crime provision would work. I have heard some claim that, under this provision, someone who commits an offence under the National Parks Act would now be subject to a life sentence. That is simply false.
In Canada, judges impose sentences following sentencing ranges established through past decisions. Judges are required by law—and every member of this committee who is a lawyer will know this—to impose sentences that are proportionate to the offence committed. In other words, the punishment must always fit the crime. If judges impose sentences that are unfit, we have appeal courts that can overturn those sentences.
You may be asking, “Well, why not specify that, Minister? Why put a maximum sentence of life in the new hate crime offence-laying provision?”
Let me explain.
First, it's important to remember that a maximum sentence is not an average sentence; it's an absolute ceiling.
Second, the new hate crime offence captures any existing offence if it was hate-motivated. That can run the gamut from a hate-motivated theft all the way to a hate-motivated attempted murder. The sentencing range entrenched in Bill was designed to mirror the existing sentencing options for all of these potential underlying offences, from the most minor to the most serious offences on the books, such as attempted murder, which can attract, right now, a life sentence.
[Translation]
This does not mean that minor offences will suddenly receive extremely harsh sentences. This would violate all the legal principles that sentencing judges are required to follow. Hate-motivated murder will result in a life sentence. A minor infraction will certainly not result in it.
Another criticism I have heard is that this bill could stifle freedom of expression. This is simply not true. On the contrary, this bill strengthens freedom of expression. There are people in Canada who cannot speak out because they legitimately fear for their safety. When they speak out, they are mistreated and subjected to truly despicable threats, intimidation and harassment.
[English]
This is carefully balanced. We consulted. We looked abroad.
We do not automatically take down material within 24 hours except for child sexual abuse material or revenge pornography. We do not touch private communications. We do not affect individual websites that do not host user-generated content.
[Translation]
This bill protects children and gives everyone the tools they need to protect themselves online. We do not tolerate hate speech in the public square. Nor must we tolerate hate speech online.
We have seen the consequences of unchecked online hate and child sexual exploitation. Ask the families of the six people killed at the Quebec City mosque by someone who was radicalized online.
[English]
Ask the young boy orphaned by the horrific attack on four members of the Afzaal family in London, Ontario. Ask the parents of young people right across this country who have taken their own lives after being sextorted by online predators.
Finally, let me set the record straight on the peace bond provision in Bill . Peace bonds are not house arrests. Peace bonds are not punishments. Peace bonds are well-established tools used to impose individually tailored conditions on someone when there is credible evidence to show that they may hurt someone or commit a crime. The proposed peace bond here would operate very similarly to existing peace bonds.
As an example, if someone posts online about their plan to deface or attack a synagogue to intimidate the Jewish community, members of the synagogue could take this information to the police and the court. They could seek to have a peace bond imposed after obtaining consent from the provincial attorney general. Decades of case law tell us that conditions must be reasonable and linked to the specific threat. Here conditions imposed on the person could include staying 100 metres away from that synagogue for a period of 12 months. If the person breached that simple condition, they could be arrested. If they abided by the conditions, they would face no consequences.
I ask you this: Why should members of that synagogue, when facing a credible threat of being targeted by a hate-motivated crime, have to wait to be attacked or to have a swastika graffitied on the front door before we act to help them? If we can prevent some attacks from happening, isn't that much better? Peace bonds are not perfect, but we believe they can be a valuable tool to keep people safe. In the face of rising hate crime, our government believes that doing nothing in an instance like this would be irresponsible.
I think that's what explains both CIJA's and the special envoy on anti-Semitism's support of Bill .
[Translation]
As always, I am open to good faith suggestions to improve this legislation. My goal is to get it right. I look forward to debating the Online Harms Act in the House of Commons and following the committee's process as it reaches that stage. I am convinced that we all have the same goal here: we need to create a safe online world, especially for the most vulnerable members of our society—our children.
[English]
Thank you for your time.
I'm happy to take your questions.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you, Mr. Attorney General and all of the rest of the witnesses, for being with us here today.
Mr. Attorney General, you're the top lawyer in the land. It's good to have you here at the justice committee.
Canada is a rule-of-law nation. We function well only if citizens of the nation have confidence in the administration of justice. That's your job. This is true for the criminal justice system, as it is for the civil justice system.
That's why it's so shocking to hear from a credible organization like the B.C. branch of the Canadian Bar Association, in a letter from four years ago that was addressed to your predecessor, Mr. Lametti, the following:
Our Supreme Court of British Columbia is presently 7 judges below complement. As a result, parties are regularly arriving at court for trials and hearings [and they're] being sent away because of a lack of judges to hear the cases. [The] parties have...spent substantial time and money preparing for court appearances, and witnesses have also been inconvenienced.
Then it goes on to talk about the financial and emotional costs.
There's an example from a lawyer. You'll appreciate this, of course, being a lawyer yourself. It was, “I have had this problem [of delays] five times I can remember in the last 18 months. [...] It happened twice in Cranbrook [Supreme Court] resulting in the client being unable to enforce a restrictive covenant” before it expired. It's difficult enough to enforce a restrictive covenant, but this person never even had an opportunity to try, so they feel that justice has been denied.
My question to you, Mr. Attorney General, is why is justice being denied to people in my home province of British Columbia?
:
I would say to you that I am acutely aware of the need to fulfill judicial vacancies. I would note for the record that in seven months in office I have appointed 74 judges thus far, and there are more to come in the immediate days to follow.
I think it's important, for comparison purposes, to reflect on the record of the previous government, which we replaced in 2015. The average number of appointments annually by that government was 65. By that metric, I'm working twice as fast as the previous government.
It's important to understand how delays occur in the criminal justice system and the civil justice system, but also who is responsible for the delays. The administration of justice in this country is, in the main, the purview of the provinces, and delays are also caused by a lack of courts and a lack of court staffing across provinces in this country.
You mentioned “confidence in the administration of justice”. I share your concern. It's entrenched in our charter, and it's a fundamental part of what I do. What I've seen fit to do is ensure that our JACs—our judicial appointments committees—have quorum and that they are able to do the work they are required to do in terms of nominating judges, such that they present recommendations to me.
Alternatively, what I have seen in provincial levels of government in terms of their own judicial appointments processes is stacking judicial appointments committees with staffers of the governing party. That relates to my province, not yours, but I think that actually undermines confidence in the administration of justice, because it injects partisanship in the appointments process. That's not what we need. We have ensured a non-partisan process that is robust and that helps us establish judges of the highest quality to represent the diversity of the country. I'll continue to appoint people of that nature.
Thank you for being here, Minister.
I have several questions running through my head, but I'll have to prioritize them. I wish I had more time, but I understand that's the way it has to be done.
First, I have some questions about the legal aid system for immigrants and refugees. I'm sure you understand that this issue is of great concern to the Bloc Québécois. In Quebec, the amount owed by the federal government is a problem. In fact, the Quebec government is not getting paid, yet it continues to spend on newcomers.
There's also the question of official languages. A total of $1.2 million has been earmarked for official languages and I'm interested in hearing how that money will be distributed among the provinces.
In addition, there's obviously the whole issue of systemic racism. You want to help judges impose sentences that take this into account. How is that going to work? How are we going to define systemic racism?
There's the question of cybersecurity, in courthouses, etc.
There are plenty of important issues, essential even, that I won't necessarily be able to address this morning, unfortunately. However, I will try.
There's also Bill , which you told us about in your opening remarks. I'm not sure how it relates to the Supplementary Estimates (C), but it is an important question, regardless. With respect to this bill, I am curious as to why you didn't introduce the age verification process, as proposed by Senator Julie Miville-Dechêne. Her proposal seemed relatively wise to me, but there's no mention of it at all in Bill C‑63.
The Bloc Québécois is in the same boat. We've proposed abolishing the two religious exceptions in the Criminal Code, which I think is essential in the current context. How is it possible that someone can still build their defence around the idea that they committed a hate crime or spread hatred because of a religious text? That is completely absurd and contrary to the values shared by all Quebeckers and, I'm certain, by the rest of Canada too.
These are all essential questions, but I'm going to focus on two important elements.
First, our committee recently passed a bill that aims to create a commission to review errors in the justice system. This is obviously something that had to be done; congratulations. I think it was high time for a major clean‑up. The commission will comprise nine members. I've tabled an amendment to the effect that these nine commissioners should be bilingual. In fact, I'm a little surprised that this wasn't planned from the outset. Still, it seems a very modest goal. Nine bilingual commissioners across Canada shouldn't be too hard to achieve. However, I've run into an objection from some of my colleagues, including one of your Liberal colleagues.
I'd like to hear your thoughts on this. If we want the justice system to be bilingual, shouldn't we necessarily make an effort by asking for bilingualism among these nine commissioners? It's not as though there are 900 of them; there are nine.
I want to thank the minister for his very clear presentation on Bill .
I want to add two things to this discussion. One is that the loudest voices on this bill often do not include those who are most likely to be subjected to hate crime campaigns. When it comes before this committee, I'm looking forward to a diversity of witnesses who can talk about the real-world impacts that online hate has. We've seen it again and again. It's often well organized.
I stood outside the House of Commons and defended the rights of trans kids. Within one day, I had 700 emails with the same defamatory and hateful two-word phrase used to describe me. I am a privileged person. I have a staff. I have all the resources and support I need. However, when you think about what happens to trans kids and their families when they are subjected to these online hate crimes, it has very real consequences.
I'm looking forward to us being able to hear from diverse voices and, in particular, those who are most impacted. I know this is not really a question to you at this point.
We have other important work we've been doing in this committee. I want to turn to Bill , which just passed this committee and was sent back to the House. This is the bill on controlling and coercive behaviour. This committee has been dealing with this topic for more than three years. One of the things that we quite clearly said was that the passage of this bill is a tool for dealing with the epidemic of intimate partner violence, but it's not the only tool.
I guess I'm asking two things here.
What other plans does the Department of Justice have to provide the necessary and associated supports for survivors of intimate partner violence?
What plans are there to do the educational work that will be necessary?
The bill says it will be proclaimed at a time chosen by cabinet. I'm assuming there will be a plan to get ready for this. I'm interested in what's going to happen with that plan. It has unanimous support, so I don't think it's premature to be asking about this at this point.
:
Thank you, Mr. Garrison, for your leadership on the first part of what you talked about and the courage that you continue to show as a parliamentarian, and also for your leadership and that of on coercive control.
In terms of supporting victims, we are constantly and actively thinking about how to better support victims, including victims of intimate partner violence. Please take a cue from what we did in Bill and in Bill with respect to the reverse onus on bail for survivors of intimate partner violence. Issues about support and funding are always on the table.
Also, please understand that when you talk about a 24-hour takedown of things like revenge porn, you're dealing with an aspect of coercive control that exists right now. That's in Bill .
You also mentioned, in your opening, hearing from voices. I think two of the most salient voices that I heard from were the two that were at the press conference with me: Jane, the mother of a child who has been sexually abused and repeatedly exploited online, and Carla Beauvais, a woman who has been intimidated and has retreated from participating in the public space.
I would also suggest taking your cues from the groups that were also there beside me. The National Council of Canadian Muslims and the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs have, in the last six months, not seen eye to eye on a lot of issues. On this bill, they do see eye to eye. They both support this, as do the special envoys on anti-Semitism and Islamophobia. Those are important voices to be hearing from, and that's what I will continue to do.
Minister, we're here in the estimates today. You spent your entire opening remarks on a defence of Bill . I recall your predecessor, Minister Lametti, when he was here. I asked him a question on the issue of MAID, when I think 25 constitutional experts said the minister's opinion on the matter was wrong. I asked the minister who was right, him or these 25 constitutional experts. And he said he was.
That kind of hubris is probably a good reason why he's not longer here and now you are, but we're starting to see that same thing on Bill with yourself, when virtually everyone has come out and said this was an effort to trample down freedom of speech. Margaret Atwood described Bill C-63 as “Orwellian”. David Thomas, who was chairperson of the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal, said:
The Liberal government's proposed Bill C-63, the online harms act, is terrible law that will unduly impose restrictions on Canadians' sacred Charter right to freedom of expression. That is what the Liberals intend. By drafting a vague law creating a draconian regime to address online “harms”, they will win their wars without firing a bullet.
There's a diverse group of people who feel that Bill is an outrageous infringement on Canadians' rights. We also see a government that will not stand up for the most vulnerable.
You had the opportunity, Minister, to introduce a bill that would have protected children, but your government, true to form, could not resist taking aim at their political opponents. This is not about hate speech, it's about speech that Liberals hate, and shutting that down.
Now Bill , if it unfortunately were to pass, will too be struck down by the courts. If you were in a position to appeal it, I have no doubt you would. That brings me to my question on your government's radical agenda.
You've decided to file a number of appeals in recent court rulings. You've appealed a ruling that found the invocation of the Emergencies Act was unconstitutional. You appealed a ruling that found that the plastic bag ban and the plastic straw ban that Canadians hate so much was unconstitutional. You were quick to appeal those. But when the Supreme Court ruled the six-month minimum sentence for the crime of child luring was unconstitutional, you chose not to file an appeal.
Why is it that, when your government's radical agenda is challenged in the courts, you're quick to appeal, but when vulnerable Canadians' lives are at stake, you choose not to appeal?
:
Mr. Moore, I disagree with pretty much everything you just said in terms of how you've characterized things. What I would say to you is to actually look at the constitutional record internationally.
We looked at France, Australia, Germany and England. In France, a takedown provision across all sets of content, including hatred content, was struck down as unconstitutional. That's specifically why we are not pursuing that. We have a takedown provision within 24 hours of child pornography and revenge porn. I hope we can agree on that, Liberals and Conservatives. We do not have an immediate takedown provision over other materials. That's the first point.
The second point is that you talked about the author Margaret Atwood. I have tremendous respect for Margaret Atwood. I've invited her into conversation about the nuances of this bill. She has a concern about freedom of expression. I share that concern. I'm duty-bound to uphold freedom of expression. I swore an oath to the Constitution. I'm the only cabinet minister who does. What we've done, through a careful approach, is to look at how we can calibrate the important need to keep Canadians safe and to protect liberty of expression.
If you had listened to Carla Beauvais at the press conference, you would have heard her talk about the fact that her own speech is being curtailed because she is so intimidated from participating in public discourse. We're trying to empower that public discourse.
There are safeguards in the bill that I would urge you to look at, about how Facebook makes its determinations in terms of ensuring that they respect freedom of speech, how the digital safety commissioner must ensure that non-discrimination occurs—
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Good morning, Minister. I'd like to thank you and your entire team for being with us this morning.
We are living in an increasingly divided world. Even though everyone is entitled to their own opinion, people are either for or against different issues. We are quick to put people into categories, to see them as being on one side or another and slap labels on them. In this increasingly complex world, and perhaps as my previous role taught me, I think it would help if people were more caring, attentive and open to each other.
In your opening remarks, you referred to Bill , which aims to protect children online. We have been hearing a lot about this bill. I have two questions for you.
First, do you believe that the definition of “hate speech” in Bill will really make it possible to achieve the goal of protecting children online?
Second, the bill seems to apply pre-emptively, even before a person has said or done anything. I wonder if you could tell me your thoughts on that.
:
Thank you, Mrs. Brière.
I would like to underscore one thing, since you've raised the same topic as Mr. Moore.
[English]
Online hatred has real-world consequences. Again, talk to the Afzaal family and to the families of the six men who were killed at the Quebec mosque. Talk to them in terms of those real-world consequences.
Second, Conservatives seem to be operating in this make-believe world where hatred isn't already regulated in Canada. We have sections 318 and 319 of the Criminal Code. Those have been upheld in Canada as reasonable limitations on speech because hatred is not protected in this country.
The proposition we are bringing forward is this: If hatred is not protected in the real world, why should it be protected in the online world? That is where we have a difference of opinion, Mr. Moore, and I think it's something that you need to address for yourselves in terms of trying to understand why groups like the NCCM and CIJA are behind this bill. It's because they want to see a curb on that very hatred.
With respect to your question, Madam Brière, of whether the hatred definition will help to protect children, absolutely it will. Again, this is not my definition. This is the definition entrenched by the Supreme Court of Canada. I didn't make it up. The didn't make it up. The courts have already established this definition. That's the definition that we use, and it will keep kids safe as they move into adulthood because we need to keep everyone safe. It's not just about targeting children.
I'll point out for Mr. Moore's edification that Australia moved on children alone in 2015. Nine years later, it's moved much beyond that. That's important to understand—that the whole world is moving in that direction, including Conservatives in Britain. I'm just puzzled why Conservatives here are afraid to do so.
Lastly, Madam Brière, you asked me about prevention and the notion of prevention assisting against hate. This is a very important question. We already have, in certain defined circumstances where reasonable grounds can be made, the ability to effect a thing like a peace bond to prevent harm against a woman facing domestic violence. That includes preventative restrictions on speech, prior restraint of speech.
What am I talking about? I'm talking about a man estranged from his former wife who cannot, because of a peace bond, post revenge porn about her. In certain circumstances, we allow this. We know this is significant. That's why we've injected in this legislation the safeguard of getting the local attorney general's consent. That is critical because it serves as that safeguard to ensure that this is not used in a manner that is overly restricted, and that it will be found constitutional.
Thank you.
:
Thank you so much, Madam Chair.
Thank you to my fellow committee members.
The motion I want to put forward is the one we have in front of us:
That pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and in view of the alarming escalation of antisemitism in Canada, the committee undertake a study on the issue of antisemitism and the additional measures that could be taken to address the valid fears that are being expressed by Canada's Jewish community.
That the study include but not be limited to the issue of antisemitism on university campuses.
That the study should be at least three meetings and that the committee report its findings to the House.
Madam Chair, briefly, I had a chance on Monday to deliver a speech in the House that dealt very much with this issue. The Jewish community in Canada is feeling frightened to a level I have never seen. While, anecdotally, people are taking mezuzahs off doors and are afraid to send their kids to school, the vast majority of Jewish Canadians are affected in a broader way. Those are anecdotal, small incidents. I don't think that's happening much. What is happening is people expressing their fears to me and wondering if they're safe in this country and have a future in this country, which I never in my life believed would happen in Canada.
I don't see that anywhere near as much, frankly, when I'm in the United States. Something is happening here. Anti-Semitism is happening around the world, but the perception of the community in Canada is drastically different from what I find south of the border. I think the committee needs to look into what is happening and what we can do.
I'm going to talk about two issues very briefly, which I think are the most poignant and important ones.
One of these is the demonstrations happening, and the lack of policing related to those demonstrations. People are blocking buildings, shouting things deemed to be hateful and intimidating people entering or leaving a building, and the police are not moving people back so that there's a safe line that allows for a differentiation between the people trying to enter or leave and the protesters. That's one thing. Why are Jewish buildings a target in Canada, and how is this making people feel? I would like the opportunity to hear from Jewish Canadians and Jewish organizations about how they feel and what they think we could do as federal legislators to better protect them from a public safety aspect, a justice aspect, etc.
The second issue is what's on campus. The biggest places where you find people feeling scared and intimidated are campuses. This is happening from Newfoundland to British Columbia. It's happening in my province of Quebec. It's happening in Ontario. It's happening everywhere. Some colleagues and I wrote a letter, in December, to the presidents of the biggest universities in Canada. We have received responses from all of them, which we can table. I think we need to hear from Universities Canada and the presidents of universities on what they're doing to protect Jewish students, and we need to hear from Jewish students regarding what they're experiencing on campus. Then we can opine on what solutions we might be able to recommend to the universities and the minister.
That being said, the most important thing is this: Symbolically, the Jewish community has failed to see leadership at the federal, provincial and municipal levels—from literally everyone. I think, if they see that our committee is interested in this issue, that there is a forum for them and that we are taking their concerns seriously and listening to them, it would be a morale boost because they will think that at least someone cares and there's hope.
I'm hoping that my colleagues will agree to do this study. Of course, I'm happy to listen to amendments and yield the floor.
Thank you, Madam Chair.
:
Madam Chair, thank you.
I obviously wholeheartedly support my colleague Mr. Housefather's motion. While he is true in all aspects of his remarks, I would add one important caveat, in that there has been a tremendous demonstration of leadership on the part of Anthony Housefather on behalf of his community in the face of some of the most vile hate that I have ever seen, certainly in my lifetime, in a way that I hope that his community will take some hope and inspiration from.
I would just add that in Toronto, my hometown, the police chief there, Chief Demkiw, just reported 48 hours ago that Toronto has seen a 93% increase in the number of reported hate crimes since October 7, 2023, and that compounds the ongoing rising tide of anti-Semitism, which I think parliamentarians, regardless of partisan stripe, have an obligation to deal head-on with.
I would also say that the anecdotes that Mr. Housefather referred to are the same stories that I hear from the community that I represent in Eglinton—Lawrence. The fear, the profound sense of anxiety and, most of all, the deep sense of abandonment that the Jewish community is feeling not only in Canada but around the world in the face of this hate should be a red flag and should sound the alarm for all of us.
There are many things that we need to do in order to push back against this, but I think that having a study that examines carefully some of the issues that Mr. Housefather has already highlighted is one way in which I believe this committee can contribute, and if we don't take this opportunity, I think it will see us take more steps backwards as a democracy.
I certainly hope that all members of this committee will see the value in putting some energy into this report so that we can come together to stem this trend and to reverse it and to continue to see Jewish Canadians and all Canadians live in a society that is free from hate.
Thank you.
I just want to say that I also am extremely concerned about the rise of anti-Semitism in the country. We just had the here telling us that we already have hate laws, hate speech laws, but people are calling “death to Jews” across the country and not a single charge has been filed.
I'm quite alarmed, when I see the protests, the violence and the targeting of Jewish businesses, that the reaction from the police is not the same as it is in.... We've just seen a fishers' protest going on. The police are there making sure that the protest remains peaceful and are bringing in their horses, but here in Ottawa when we're having pro-Palestinian demonstrations and they're calling out things that are anti-Semitic and kicking in cars and breaking off mirrors, the police are standing by and doing nothing. What is the point of having federal law if you don't have the enforcement of law?
I think that this has come to a crisis point, and I'm very supportive of doing a study to figure out what exactly we can do to use the existing laws and enforce them, and what else we can add to that, because Jews don't feel safe in this country. I'm alarmed at the demise of what was Canada: a free nation where people could feel safe and worship. I think people don't feel safe, and we need to address it.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you to Mr. Housefather for your courage in standing up for the Jewish community and putting forward this motion. I think it's a very important study, and I support that we undertake that.
In my home province of British Columbia, at my university, the University of British Columbia, there was a referendum or a threat of one recently to terminate the lease that Hillel House has had on campus for many years. It's a very significant presence in the university. It is a haven for the Jewish student body there. Thankfully, the referendum didn't go ahead, with the good leadership of the student association; but just the fact that the referendum was even suggested, I think, has been very disturbing for not only people in my home province of British Columbia but throughout the country.
The motion also would have included BDS sanctions—boycott, divestment and sanctions—against Israel and anything to do with Israel, and that's just the newest form of anti-Semitism. I find it all very disturbing.
I'm very supportive of having this study to better understand what is going on here in Canada with anti-Semitism, which is something I never thought I would see in my lifetime, and also to demonstrate to the Jewish community that we stand with them and that they are an important part of Canadian culture.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
I'd like to begin by thanking Mr. Housefather for moving his motion. I think it expresses a concern that many of us share, more or less everywhere throughout Quebec and Canada.
Each and every person should be able to live out their religious beliefs in peace and freedom. I don't think that religious or moral beliefs, apostolic or otherwise, should divide people. Whatever the religion, it should be a set of values that brings people together, not divides them.
I have a great deal of respect, fondness and sympathy for members of the Jewish community, given what they're going through at the moment. I don't want to stray too far from the debate, but Quebec has a state secularism law. I've had discussions with many friends of the Jewish faith, as well as some of the Muslim faith. There are extremists in all faiths, but I would say that 99% of people agree that the state should be secular and that everyone should be able to practice their religion in peace, respect and solidarity.
I don't have anything to add to the debate, but I would like to say that I agree with what Mr. Housefather and Mr. Mendicino have said. These things are important.
You can count on the support of the Bloc Québécois on these issues.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
I appreciate Mr. Garrison's amendment. Of course, Islamophobia is also a very important form of hate, but they are two very distinct and separate forms of hate, so I want to make sure that it is clear that the meetings that we're going to have on one versus the other and the report that we're going to do are going to be clear that we're doing something on anti-Semitism and something on Islamophobia and that they're not two tropes that are together. Too many times, people feel that one is equal to the other, and when an act of anti-Semitism occurs, they feel necessary to mention Islamophobia in the same breath and vice versa. In the same way, anti-Black racism is not the same as anti-gay racism. They are all different tropes, so my proposal would be to subamend Mr. Garrison's amendment to add the following words.
It would now read, in line two, “Undertake a study on the issue of anti-Semitism and”, and add the words, “a study on the issue of Islamophobia”. I'm adding the words “a study on the issue of” after the end of line two.
In line five at the beginning of the second paragraph, we would replace the word “study”, the third word, with “independent studies”. Then, on line seven at the beginning of the third paragraph, instead of saying “that the study”, it should say “that each study”. Then, instead of “that it should be at least six meetings”, it would be “that each study should be at least two meetings”. I've heard from colleagues that six meetings means that we're not studying anything else for a prolonged period of time, so instead of three meetings each, it would be two meetings each: two meetings on anti-Semitism and two meetings on Islamophobia.
Then, “that the committee report its findings on both studies”. So, after the word “findings”, it would be “on both studies to the House”.
Thank you, Madam Chair and Mr. Clerk.
[Translation]
Mr. Fortin, I apologize for not having drafted this in French, but I can give you the—