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Quebec calls on Supreme Court justice to recuse himself from secularism law case

The Quebec government is requesting that Supreme Court Justice Mahmud Jamal recuse himself from hearing the challenge to the province's secularism law because he was board president for one of the plaintiffs.

In letters sent to the registrar of the Supreme Court of Canada, attorney-general of Quebec, the, as well as — a women's group that has lobbied for anti-trans policies — argue Jamal's partiality in the case.

From 2006 to 2019, Jamal was on the board of directors for the Canadian Civil Liberties Association (CCLA), which along with the National Council of Canadian Muslims, filed a legal challenge on June 17, 2019, in Quebec Superior Court to stay the application of the secularism law and declare it invalid.

Quebec's secularism law — commonly known as Bill 21 — prevents public school teachers, police officers, judges and government lawyers, among other civil servants in positions of authority, from wearing religious symbols, such as hijabs, crucifixes or turbans, while at work.

Jamal resigned from the CCLA board on June 24, 2019, when he was appointed to the Court of Appeal for Ontario. He was nominated to the Supreme Court of Canada in 2021.

The attorney-general's office argues that as president of the CCLA, Jamal was «necessarily involved in some way in the preparation» of the case, «whether through its writing, its revision or simply to approve its content.»

«In such a context, the [] PGQ considers that a reasonable and well-informed person would fear that Justice Jamal would not have the impartiality required to hear this case,» the letter reads.

Luc Alarie, who represents the, a non-profit that promotes secularism, noted that the CCLA's opposition to the law was established while Jamal was still part of the board,

Read more on cbc.ca