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Please return to this page frequently. New policies will be arriving regularly over the next few weeks.
  • Ontario Party Charter
  • Career Creation
  • Conscience Rights
  • COVID-19
  • Digital ID
  • Education: K-12
  • Education: Post Secondary
  • Energy Affordability
  • Environment
  • Health Care
  • Housing
  • Infrastructure
  • Private Property
  • Protecting Life
  • Recall Policy
Conscience Rights
Conscience Rights
Freedom of Expression and Conscience Rights in Ontario

All citizens of Ontario, among other rights, are guaranteed freedom of expression and freedom of conscience under Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The Charter specifically protects individuals from acts by their governments that would violate those rights. However, as has become increasingly apparent, governments—both federal and provincial—can, and do, violate those rights with increasing regularity and ease.

For example, in Ontario, members of professional organizations and those seeking employment in certain fields, on pain of losing their right to work or advance in their career, are being compelled to complete ideological attestations that demand how they must think. These attestations are unrelated to their competency in the job and, for many, at odds with their beliefs and moral convictions.

Doctors in Ontario opposed to assisted suicide are now compelled to assist by referral or they lose their licence to practice.

Some employees are losing jobs and certain students are being punished by university administrators or mobbed by campus groups for the “crime” of supporting legally held conservative positions.

In the fall of 2021, with the launch of vaccine passports, citizens who requested that their right to freedom of conscience, informed consent, medical privacy, and bodily autonomy be respected, had their request overruled. In the absence of sufficient cause, they were banned from public life, fired from their jobs, or removed from their college or university programs.

These few examples cannot do justice to the vast list of cases that exist. However, an Ontario Party Government will do justice and reverse this trend.

An Ontario Party Government will:

  • Use all means at its disposal to ensure that no Ontario citizen can be compelled to commit an act, or communicate an idea, that directly contradicts their sincerely held religious beliefs or moral convictions deemed legal under the Criminal Code and protected by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Neither the provincial government, its affiliated bodies, nor those organizations that receive provincial government funding will be permitted to breach the conscience rights of a citizen.
  • We believe in the presumption of innocence and the right to justice and a fair trial without undue delay regardless of economic circumstances, social standing, ethnic, cultural, or ideological affiliation, or biological trait;
  • Strengthen the definition of “creed” as applied at the level of the province to allow for equal protection of sincerely held, identity-informing, moral convictions not rooted in religious belief.
  • Guarantee that all Ontarians, but particularly those of conservative worldview (as they are currently subjected to the greatest censorship and discrimination), can exercise their freedom of expression to its fullest extent as allowed by law.
  • Withhold provincial funding from any provincially subsidized organization that compels any of its members to contradict or disavow their legally protected religious beliefs or moral convictions; or discriminates against, or punishes, any of its members for their protected and legal exercise of free expression.
  • Establish a separate government office specifically dedicated to guarding the free expression and conscience rights of Ontario citizens and aiding those who have experienced a breach of those rights.