A motion to reverse a ban on the keffiyeh within Queen’s Park failed to receive unanimous consent Thursday just moments after Ontario Premier Doug Ford reiterated his view that prohibiting the garment in the House is divisive.
“We see the division right now that’s going on. It’s not healthy and this will just divide the community even more,” Ford said at an unrelated news conference on Thursday before Opposition Leader Marit Stiles presented her motion.
On Wednesday, Ford called on House Speaker Ted Arnott to reverse the ban on the scarf, which is worn by Palestinians, Muslims and Arabs across the globe. Stiles had previously written Arnott on April 12 stating that members of her caucus had been asked to remove the garment while in the building.
In a letter addressed to Stiles dated April 16, Arnott responded by saying that after “extensive research,” he concluded that the “wearing of keffiyehs at the present time in our assembly is clearly intended to be a political statement.”
However, he said, if a motion to allow the wearing of the garment received unanimous consent, he would accept the decision.
In a motion presented Thursday, Stiles said: “I seek unanimous consent that this House acknowledge that the keffiyeh is a culturally significant clothing item to many in Ontario’s Palestinian, Muslim and Arab communities and should neither be considered an expression of a political message nor an accessory likely to cause disorder, and should therefore be permitted to be worn in the House.”
The motion failed.
In February, Arnott issued a reminder to MPPs about the House’s long-standing decorum rules on accessories that “express a political message or are likely to cause disorder,” although the keffiyeh was not mentioned specifically.
Liberal Leader Bonnie Crombie has also called on Arnott to reverse the decision.