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Following Calgary’s lead, Toronto city council on Wednesday unanimously passed a motion calling for a nationwide campaign to denounce Quebec’s Bill 21, which forbids some government employees from wearing religious symbols such as Muslim hijabs, Jewish kippahs and Sikh turbans.

The law, passed by Premier François Legault’s Coalition Avenir Québec government in June, targets workers such as teachers, police officers and judges.

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In its motion, Toronto council said it is opposed to the law and endorses an initiative proposed by Calgary city council that asks the Canadian Coalition of Municipalities Against Racism and Discrimination “to create a nationwide campaign that highlights the harmful widespread impacts of Bill 21 on social cohesion and inclusion in Canada.”

Toronto also called on the federal government “to unequivocally condemn and challenge Quebec’s Bill 21.”

A city of Toronto background document attached to the motion described Bill 21 as “a strategic attempt to stifle and limit the civic participation of individuals who choose to wear religious symbols under the guise of secularism.”

Quebec’s law “disproportionately impacts Muslims, Sikhs, and Jews who all participate in different forms of religious symbols … and is a significant step toward the growing polarization and marginalization of religious minorities,” the document states.