Quebec rights commission drops discrimination cases after Supreme Court’s Ward ruling
MONTREAL — An October Supreme Court decision hailed by some as a victory for free speech is leading Quebec’s human rights commission to drop dozens of cases involving allegations of discriminatory comments.
The commission’s new approach comes after the Supreme Court of Canada last fall overturned a ruling by Quebec’s human rights tribunal, which had found that Quebec comedian Mike Ward discriminated against disabled child singer Jérémy Gabriel during a comedy routine.
Philippe-André Tessier, the president of the commission, said it was investigating about 100 cases involving discriminatory remarks this year. Most of those cases will have to be dropped as a result of the Ward ruling, he said, though a case-by-case review remains ongoing.
“The commission still retains jurisdiction if it’s a situation of harassment, or if another right guaranteed under the Quebec Charter of Human Rights and Freedom is affected, such as the right to … employment without discrimination, or the right to rent an apartment without discrimination,” Tessier said in an interview Tuesday.