Bill 21: Five things about the province’s contentious secularism law
MONTREAL — Quebec’s secularism law, known as Bill 21, has faced numerous court challenges since it was adopted nearly five years ago, with the Quebec Court of Appeal the latest to weigh in. Here’s a look at the law.
What is Bill 21?
Bill 21 was passed in June 2019 and confirmed the province’s secular status. Formally called “An Act Respecting the Laicity of the State,” it sets out four principles of Quebec secularism: separation of state and religion, the state’s religious neutrality, the equality of all citizens and freedom of conscience and freedom of religion.
Among its most controversial measures is one forbidding state employees deemed to be in positions of power from wearing religious symbols at work.