Equality Rights Statute Amendment Act

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

The Equality Rights Statute Amendment Act,[1] also known as An Act to Amend Ontario Statutes to Provide for the Equal Treatment of Persons in Spousal Relationships or as Bill 167, was a proposed law in the Canadian province of Ontario, introduced by the government of Bob Rae in 1994, which would have provided same-sex couples with rights and obligations mostly equal to those of opposite-sex common law couples by amending the definition of “spouse” in 79 provincial statutes. Despite the changes, the bill did not formally confer same-sex marriage rights in the province, as the definition of marriage in Canada is under federal jurisdiction; instead, the bill proposed civil union status for same-sex couples, although it was not explicitly labelled as such since the term was not yet in widespread international use.[2]

The legislation was in part a response to a 1992 ruling by the Ontario Human Rights Tribunal in the case of Michael Leshner and Michael Stark,[3] which obligated the government to provide spousal benefits to same-sex partners of government employees.[4]

The bill was first introduced in the legislature on May 17, 1994, by Attorney General Marion Boyd.[5] The bill passed first reading by a handful of votes, with the most vocal opposition emerging between first and second reading as public reaction to the bill began to mount.[5] In an attempt to salvage the bill on second reading, Boyd dropped the most controversial provisions, including adoption rights, but the move did not win the support of any MPP who was not already supporting the bill in its original form.[5] The bill was defeated by a recorded vote of 68 to 59 on second reading on June 9, 1994.[6]

Victoria—Haliburton by-election

Liberal leader Lyn McLeod had long pledged her party's support for legislation extending civil rights to same-sex couples; Liberal MPP Tim Murphy, who represented the riding that included Toronto's Church and Wellesley gay village, had even drafted and presented a similar albeit less sweeping private member's bill, Bill 45, which passed first reading in the legislature in June 1993 but was delayed as the government prepared Bill 167.[2]

However, the party's response to the issue was dramatically altered by a provincial by-election in Victoria—Haliburton on March 17, 1994, following the resignation of Dennis Drainville. With the Liberals holding a strong lead in provincewide polling at the time, Liberal candidate Sharon McCrae had been widely expected to win the resulting by-election, but the tide changed when the local Progressive Conservative riding association ran a campaign ad:

<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

SOME PEOPLE HAVE THEIR PRIORITIES WRONG
The NDP and the Liberals have their priorities all mixed up. The NDP Government's new priority is to introduce a law that would provide gay and lesbian couples with the same family benefits as married couples. The Liberals not only support this idea—their leader, Lyn McLeod, has been pushing it personally for months. Chris Hodgson feels that government should be focused on job creation, not on new spending schemes that will increase the cost of doing business in Ontario and drive jobs away. If you think that jobs should be the first priority for Victoria—Haliburton, support Chris Hodgson on March 17.[2]

The ad resulted in Progressive Conservative candidate Chris Hodgson quickly gaining support at the expense of McCrae, and ultimately winning the by-election. Bill 167 consequently came to be seen by the Liberal party as an electoral liability, causing "great panic" in the caucus and leading several Liberal MPPs to switch sides on the issue.[2] As a result, McLeod chose to withdraw the party's support of the bill,[2] and just three Liberal MPPs — including Murphy, who remained the bill's single most vocal supporter[2] — continued to support it.[2]

While the withdrawal of Liberal support did not kill the bill by itself, as the New Democrats still had enough votes to pass it if their caucus had been united, twelve New Democratic MPPs were also opposed to the legislation.[2] Rae ultimately permitted a free vote on the bill within his caucus, albeit with the warning that he would not support the dissenting MPPs if they ran for re-election in the 1995 election.[2]

Outside opposition

Opposition to the legislation was also noted outside the legislature.

Aloysius Ambrozic, the archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Toronto stated his objections to the bill granting same-sex couples equal standing to opposite-sex ones, although he insisted that he did not oppose protecting the rights of individual homosexual people.[2] Don Pennell, the leader of the minor socially-conservative Family Coalition Party of Ontario, was quoted as saying that "homosexuals may choose to behave in a certain way but it is wrong for the government to legally sanction and support these choices. This legislation would have put heterosexual and homosexual relationships on virtually the same level, which is morally reprehensible and economically foolish."[7]

Final vote

Yeas: 59

Nays: 68

Aftereffects

In the immediate moments after the bill was defeated, gay activists in the visitors' gallery of the legislature began to loudly protest, and were quickly chased out of the building — in some cases violently — by Ontario Provincial Police officers.[8] According to Toronto Sun columnist Christie Blatchford, "It all came down, in the end, to dozens of the Queen's Park security guards donning rubber gloves and breaking open a duffle bag full of billy clubs. So protected (Against what? AIDS? Women holding hands? Men wearing T-shirts with pink triangles?), they linked arms and moved on the gays and lesbians who had been sitting quietly all afternoon, in the public galleries. The security officers-a mix of Ontario Provincial Police and the Ontario Government Protective Service-let the gays and lesbians blow off a little steam and then chased them down a flight of stairs from the second floor to the main floor of the Legislative building, out of the foyer and into the lovely evening light. [S]ome of them had been hit by billy clubs, a couple had been dragged away, some had been pushed down the stairs...."[8] Over the next two hours, crowds of protestors began to gather in both Toronto and Ottawa, marching through the streets in what the LGBT newspaper Xtra! would later characterize as the largest spontaneous demonstration of queer anger in the province since Operation Soap.[5]

McLeod's decision to withdraw the party's support of Bill 167 led to ongoing criticism, with activists and opposing politicians branding her as a "flip-flopper" who could not be trusted to keep a campaign promise.[2] This, in turn, contributed significantly to the party's defeat in the 1995 election, during which some Progressive Conservative election ads depicted McLeod as a weathervane continually shifting direction with the wind. The resulting perception of untrustworthiness proved more damaging to the party's election prospects than the same-sex benefits issue itself; even Murphy, who should seemingly have been spared by his status as a champion of LGBT civil rights in the most broadly LGBT-friendly electoral district in the province, was himself defeated by PC candidate Al Leach.[2] Similarly, the governing New Democrats were trounced in the 1995 election; although many of the MPPs who had voted in favour of the legislation were defeated, so were all 12 of the dissidents.[2]

The gay community in Ontario, additionally, held the Rae government's handling of the bill against the party for many years. In his book On the Fringe: Gays and Lesbians in Politics, political scientist David Rayside argued that both Rae and Boyd mishandled the bill by miscalculating its ability to pass on a free vote, by failing to pair it with a comprehensive public relations campaign to properly educate voters on why it was needed, and by doing little to manage the misgivings of opposing MPPs until the last minute.[5] Even as late as 2003, Chris Phibbs, a former assistant to Toronto city councillor Kyle Rae, cited the failure of Bill 167 as her primary reason for refusing to seek the NDP endorsement in her own campaign for a city council seat in the 2003 municipal election.[5]

The bill's defeat also led to the creation of the activist group Foundation for Equal Families.[2]

Xtra! has also argued, however, that the failure of Bill 167 provided other governments with a roadmap of how not to handle controversial LGBT rights legislation, and thus ironically paved the way for future successes; just one year later in 1995, for example, the NDP government in British Columbia did successfully pass an LGBT rights bill that included adoption rights.[5]

Same-sex marriage in Ontario was ultimately legalized in 2003, when the Court of Appeal for Ontario, deciding on Halpern v. Canada (Attorney General), upheld a lower court ruling which declared that defining marriage in heterosexual-only terms violated the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.[9]

References

  1. Ruth Colker, American Law in the Age of Hypercapitalism: The Worker, the Family and the State. New York University Press, 1998. ISBN 0-8147-1562-1.
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 David Rayside, On the Fringe: Gays & Lesbians in Politics. Cornell University Press, 1998. ISBN 0-8014-8374-3.
  3. "Homosexual rights, jobs main issues in by-election Tories attack Liberals, NDP over same-sex spousal benefits". The Globe and Mail, March 14, 1994.
  4. "Ontario won't appeal gay rights ruling; Group says there's no political will to end discrimination in provincial laws". Ottawa Citizen, September 29, 1992.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 "Thanks, Bob, for nothing". Xtra!, April 30, 2007.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 Debate and vote at second reading.
  7. "Ont. says ‘no’ to same-sex legislation Bill 167 defeated 68-59". The Interim, June 16, 1994.
  8. 8.0 8.1 "We're Here, We're Queer. But Are the Dailies Used to It?". Ryerson Review of Journalism, March 1999.
  9. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.