N.B. gender policy in schools: Premier won’t back down, says it’s an election winner
FREDERICTON — As he looks ahead to an election year, New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs says he has no intention of backing down on his government’s changes to the province’s policy on gender identity in schools.
In fact, he seems to be pushing the topic harder as he vies for a third term in office.
For Higgs, parental rights are “very important.” Those rights, he said, are reflected in his government’s changes to Policy 713, which require parents’ consent before teachers can use the preferred name or pronouns for transgender or nonbinary students under 16. That policy has been copied by Saskatchewan, but has also led to serious dissent within Higgs’s governing party, a lawsuit, and strong criticism across the country.
In an end-of-year interview with The Canadian Press, Higgs said he expects the issue to figure prominently in his Progressive Conservative party’s upcoming campaign for the election, scheduled for Oct. 21, 2024.