Members Login

Tag: ucp

Statement from the President of the CTF/FCE

Ottawa, January 27, 2026 – The Canadian Teachers’ Federation (CTF/FCE) remains alarmed by the rise in attacks on the rights of workers and their livelihoods in North America.

Canada’s educators emphasize their solidarity with workers north and south of the border whose jobs have been lost or are at risk due to reckless and unjustified tariffs or aimless austerity measures.

Instead of reenacting nationalist tools from the last century that ultimately plunged the world into two devastating world wars and several global economic crises, the CTF/FCE strongly believes in international cooperation and mutually beneficial trade amongst allies and friends.

We call on the Canadian government to increase support for colleagues in the automotive, steel, manufacturing, and resource sectors, which have come under pressure through no fault of their own and now face the threat of a new imperialist approach to trade on this continent.

Canada needs to stand up to these destructive developments and be a champion and protector of workers and insist that their rights are protected and respected in any international trade agreement that includes Canada. A failure to do so would jeopardize the stability of the entire economy. If the private economy suffers, public services are at risk of falling victim to misguided austerity.

Workers are the backbone of every economy. In the face of unprecedented external pressures on our economy, the federal, provincial and territorial governments need to play their part to build an economy that delivers for everyone by:

  • Supporting communities through job protections and public service investments.
  • Investing in education, public healthcare, and housing affordability.
  • Fighting tax evasion and price gouging.
  • Insisting on the protection and respect of workers’ rights in any international trade agreement.

At a time when global economic uncertainty demands principled leadership and renewed collaboration, Canada faces an important choice. Rather than contributing to the stability and shared prosperity that working people depend on, recent policy approaches have too often fallen short of the coordinated, forward -looking action this moment demands. The CTF/FCE calls on the Government of Canada to demonstrate clear leadership by reaffirming its commitment to cooperation, fair trade, and economic policies that protect and strengthen the rights of workers at home and abroad.

In Quebec, the Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ) is trying to break unions by making it more difficult for workers to join and by restricting how union dues can be collected or paid. The same strategy has already been applied in Alberta, where the United Conservative Party (UCP) government ended a legal teachers’ strike by invoking the notwithstanding clause, thereby denying our colleagues their Charter rights to free and collective bargaining.

These actions do not unite Canadians; instead, they divide citizens seemingly for the sake of shoring up power in the hands of increasingly unpopular governments. In times of existential threats to Canada’s well-being, this is not the type of behaviour any worker should have to tolerate.

The Canadian government cannot afford to repeat the same mistakes.

In solidarity,

Clint Johnston
President, The Canadian Teachers’ Federation

About the CTF/FCE

Founded in 1920, the CTF/FCE is a national alliance of provincial and territorial teachers’ organizations that represent over 370,000 teachers and education workers across Canada. The CTF/FCE is also an affiliate of Education International, which represents more than 33 million educators.

Media Contact

Nika Quintao, Director of Public Affairs (CTF/FCE)
[email protected]   
Mobile: 613-688-4319

Statement from the President of the CTF/FCE

The Canadian Teachers’ Federation (CTF/FCE) calls on the Prime Minister to turn his attention to the shameful and heavy-handed use of the notwithstanding clause by the Government of Alberta to force striking teachers back to work with Bill 2 – “Back to School Act.”

On behalf of the over 370,000 teachers and educators we represent, the CTF/FCE fully condemns the Government of Alberta’s recent decision to violate the right to strike and other democratic rights of Alberta teachers. This action belies one of the fundamental democratic charter rights of all Canadians.

This precedent-setting decision blatantly aims to alter the relationship between a provincial government and its provincial teacher union. Intended or not, it also impacts the Canadian labour movement nationally. The introduction of this legislation has expanded a dispute between the Alberta’ Teachers Association (ATA) and the Government of Alberta to one between all Canadian workers and their employers. Organizations representing teachers in provinces and territories across the country have released or are preparing statements loudly echoing our condemnation of this action.

Bill 2 harms students and families long-term. It ignores the urgent crisis of classroom size and complexity, prolongs the very issues the ATA has been working to fix—like chronic underfunding of public education—and sets a dangerous precedent that allows governments to further erode the high-quality public services Canadians rely on: a key part of our national identity. If this becomes acceptable behaviour, the standards of the public education and public health systems—cornerstones of what makes Canada an enticing place to raise a family and call home—will continue to erode.

The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms enshrines the fundamental freedom of association and the right to strike, both essential pillars of democratic labour relations in Canada. The rights that Canadian workers have fought for over many decades need to be strengthened, especially in times of a shifting global economy and uncertainty, rather than being made optional on a whim.

We urge the Federal government to review the applicability of the Notwithstanding Clause when provincial/territorial governments use it to deny citizens fundamental democratic and human rights. Canada is a federation, but there are limits to what is acceptable; violating basic rights must not become permissible. We call upon Prime Minister Carney to protect the standard of rights and freedoms that everyone in this country deserves to rely on.

Clint Johnston,
CTF/FCE President

About the CTF/FCE

Founded in 1920, the CTF/FCE is a national alliance of provincial and territorial teachers’ organizations that represent over 370,000 teachers and education workers across Canada. The CTF/FCE is also an affiliate of Education International, which represents more than 33 million educators.

Media Contact

Nika Quintao, Director of Public Affairs (CTF/FCE)
[email protected]   
Mobile: 613-688-4319

Accessibility