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OTTAWA — The BC Civil Liberties Association, the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, and the Ligue des droits et liberties jointly released the following statement in response to Alberta’s planned use of the notwithstanding clause to pass three anti-trans laws:

We, the undersigned, represent Canada’s leading civil liberties organizations from across the country—the BC Civil Liberties Association, the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, and Quebec’s Ligue des droits et libertés. We are united in our deep alarm over the Alberta government’s announced plan to invoke the notwithstanding clause in an attempt to shield three laws from judicial scrutiny.

Our organizations are fundamentally concerned with fighting for democratic accountability and protecting against government overreach. Alberta’s proposed use of the notwithstanding clause undermines both. These laws directly attack the rights of trans and gender diverse Albertans, including youth. By trying to insulate them from judicial review, the government is deliberately closing the courthouse doors to some of the most vulnerable people in our society. This sets a dangerous precedent that threatens the rights of all Canadians.

The Supreme Court of Canada has affirmed that trans and gender-diverse people face unique vulnerability to discrimination. Denying these individuals access to courts to test the constitutionality of laws that specifically target them would entrench stigma, perpetuate inequality, and withhold the equal protection of the law. The harms are not speculative. These laws threaten the safety, dignity, health, and well-being of people who already face systemic barriers in all aspects of public life.

Alberta’s plan reflects a deeply troubling national trend: the growing normalization of the notwithstanding clause to avoid accountability, strip marginalized people of Charter protections and sidestep constitutional obligations which undermines the rule of law. This clause was never intended to be used routinely or pre-emptively. It was designed as an extraordinary measure, deployed only in the rarest of circumstances. Its casual use to insulate discriminatory laws from scrutiny corrodes the foundations of our constitutional democracy.

We are already seeing the risks of the growing trend to use the notwithstanding clause elsewhere in Canada. In Quebec, the clause has been used repeatedly to override fundamental rights of religious and linguistic minorities—through Bill 21 passed in 2019 (barring certain public servants from wearing religious symbols), Bill 96 passed in 2022 (limiting access to English-language services), and Bill 94 introduced in 2025 (restricting access to public services for those wearing face coverings and expanding the ban of wearing religious symbols to all the school staff).

In other provinces, like Ontario and Saskatchewan, governments have attempted to use the clause to suppress labour rights, limit political expression, and restrict the rights of trans youth.

While trans and gender-diverse Albertans will bear the most immediate and devastating impacts of these laws, this is not only their fight. A government that claims the right to set aside judicial oversight for some groups, claims the right to do so for any group. Freedom of expression, freedom of religion, equality before the law, the right to life and liberty are constitutionally protected rights and cornerstones of Canadian democracy. They were never meant to be optional, or to be applied selectively when politically convenient. If these rights and freedoms can be suspended at will, no one’s freedoms are secure.

We call on the Premier and the Alberta government to:

1. Repeal the Health Statutes Amendment Act, 2024, the Education Amendment Act, 2024, and the Fairness and Safety in Sport Act;
2. Refrain from invoking the notwithstanding clause to try to shield these laws from judicial scrutiny;
3. Respect the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and allow the courts to fulfill their constitutional role, as is required in a free and democratic society.

Respect for human rights and civil liberties is not a partisan value. It is the bedrock of Canadian democracy. We stand together to demand that the Alberta government uphold, not erode, those values.

Signed,

BC Civil Liberties Association
Canadian Civil Liberties Association
Ligue des droits et libertés

About the Canadian Civil Liberties Association

The CCLA is an independent, non-profit organization with supporters from across the country. Founded in 1964, the CCLA is a national human rights organization committed to defending the rights, dignity, safety, and freedoms of all people in Canada.

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