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Transgender rights bill passes key Commons vote, heads to committee

Oct 18, 2016 | 3:15 PM

OTTAWA — A bill meant to enshrine the rights of transgender people by adding gender identity and expression to human rights and hate crime laws is heading to the justice committee.

The House of Commons voted by a margin of 248 to 40 to pass the legislation, known as Bill C-16, at second reading.

Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould and New Democrat MP Nathan Cullen — political rivals who have found common ground on the issue of trans rights — hugged each other on the floor of the House after the vote.

The legislation would, if passed, make it illegal under the Canadian Human Rights Act to deny someone a job — or otherwise discriminate against them in the workplace — on the basis of they gender they identify with or outwardly express.