Quebec’s education minister has formally apologized to a renowned McGill University ethics professor for removing him from consultations based on false information.
Jean-Francois Roberge delivered the apology in a statement Sunday, after several days of mixed messages.
Daniel Weinstock was to speak at a forum on the future of a provincial course on ethics and religious culture, but the Education Department withdrew its invitation Wednesday shortly after the publication of a column that erroneously accused Weinstock of supporting symbolic circumcision on girls.
READ MORE: Education Minister Jean-François Roberge says many anglophones in favour of CAQ government
Get breaking National news
The Journal de Montréal columnist admitted Friday that his piece was inaccurate but did not apologize, and Weinstock was told by the province he could attend the forum but not as a speaker.
On the sidelines of a conference Friday in Montreal, Roberge said he wished the situation had been handled differently and that he contacted Weinstock to “make amends,” but he did not offer an apology, and he stood by his decision to remove him as a speaker.
Roberge described a “cordial” phone discussion with the university professor, but in Le Devoir’s Saturday edition, Weinstock, who’d learned of his disinvitation through the media, said he planned to sue the government for damage to his reputation.
Roberge changed his tune on Sunday.
READ MORE: English community groups in Quebec to challenge Bill 40 in court
“I would like to offer my sincere apologies to Mr. Daniel Weinstock for having excluded him, as an expert, from the consultation forum on the review of the course on ethics and religious culture,” Roberge said in a short statement.
Roberge added the government wants to hear from Weinstock and hopes he will be able to present at a later date.
For his part, Weinstock says in a Facebook post that he knows “apologies in politics are not easy, and I truly appreciate the fact that the minister has made them publicly.”
- ‘A death trap’: Striking Canada Post workers explain the job’s toll on them
- Freeland won’t say if deficit set to rise but will meet debt-to-GDP anchor
- Postal strike delaying delivery of medicine, necessities to remote areas: AFN chief
- Need a passport? How to get yours as Canada Post strike leaves 185K stuck
Comments