The U.S. 2016 presidential election and post-election is causing much debate, criticism, and protest outside of America. Canadians have actively participated in public marches and protests in response to Trump’s comments and proposed policies, as well as the recent U.S. ban on entry to that country from certain Muslim nations. According to a recent CNN/ORC poll, more than eight in 10 Americans have said that the U.S. was more deeply divided on major issues in 2016 than in the past several years.
With this in mind, we need to ask where political talk fits in the workplace? Or more importantly, should it?
The costs of partisan political arguments in the workplace
According to a recent CareerBuilder Survey:
- Three in 10 employers have argued with a co-worker over a political candidate vs. 17 percent of workers
- IT employers most likely to argue about candidates, followed by manufacturing employers
- More than a third of workers say political correctness has hindered their business
According to Joseph Grenny, four-time New York Times bestselling author and leading social scientist for business performance, when it comes to the topic of politics, “emotions run strong, the stakes are high, and opinions vary.”
A study commissioned by BetterWorks and Wakefield Research revealed that 87 percent of 500 American full-time employed adults surveyed were reading political social media posts during the workday. According to Kris Duggan, CEO and Co-Founder of BetterWorks, this equals to about two hours lost daily. It was also revealed that 73 percent of those surveyed have talked politics with their colleagues since the election and 37 percent with their boss or manager; 49 percent even revealed that they have witnessed political conversations turn into an argument at work (63 percent when it involves millennials).
With the infiltration of U.S. politics in Canada, elections in Canada are getting more contentious as well. Especially now that Kevin O’Leary has entered the Conservative party leadership race and Kelly Leitch is adopting Trump-type rhetoric.
Canadian employers and managers should be aware that the topic of politics in the workplace is not just an HR issue, but an issue relating to the other HR: human rights.
How workplace partisan political arguments affect human rights
As indicated in Forbes magazine:
Workplace debates about a particular candidate’s fitness for office often include mention of genders, races or religions or their views on hot-button social issues such as abortion, “family values,” immigration and healthcare, which often are polarizing issues on which there are strong and opposing views among employees of different genders, religions, national origins, etc. The potential for heated disagreements — and inflammatory, impulsive, ill-advised comments — is obvious.”
These debates can bring about complaints and claims of workplace discrimination and harassment/bullying.
Including retaliation in which it is alleged that “my supervisor is biased against [women/non-Christians/Hispanics] as shown by his comments about [healthcare/abortion/immigration policy]” or “the company punished me because I disagreed with my boss about [a social issue implicating gender, nationality, or religion].”
Destabilizing a person by making fun of his or her beliefs, values, political choices, and mocking his or her weak points is discrimination and harassment under human rights legislation and under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom.
This type of harassment can create a negative or hostile work environment that can interfere with an employee’s job performance and result in the employee being refused a job, a promotion or a training opportunity.
However, employees do have the right to participate in political activities, even those who work in the public service sector. In 1991, the Supreme Court upheld a public servant’s right to engage in political activities. The Court ruled that banning political activity infringes on workers’ Charter rights to freedom of expression. Public servants can now volunteer for election campaigns, post political lawn signs, make phone calls and deliver flyers — so long as they don’t use office resources and their activities don’t impede their ability to do their jobs.
What can employers do?
According to Dr. David Doorey (Professor of Work Law and Industrial Relations at York University, Director of the School of HRM at York, Academic Director of Osgoode Hall Law School’s executive LLM Program in Labour and Employment Law, and he sits on the Advisory Board of the Osgoode Certificate program in Labour Law):
Unionized employees can’t be fired without an actual reason unrelated to the employer’s personal biases, because unions bargain ‘just cause’ provisions to protect workers. So if you’re unionized, you almost certainly can’t be fired for your political opinions.”
“If you are not unionized, then you CAN be fired for your political reasons—or for any other stupid reason for that matter—unless either you have bargained a contract clause providing others (hardly any employees do so) or a statute prohibits the discrimination. There is no common law protection against discrimination on the basis of political belief.”
Private sector employers, who have a non-unionized workplace, have wide discretion when it comes to limiting the political expression of employees in the workplace. However, employers can run afoul of human rights legislation including laws protecting political expression, when there is evidence of disparate treatment, uneven application of the employer’s policies, or adverse or retaliatory treatment based solely upon an employee’s political expression or position.
Human rights protections across the country
Not all Canadian jurisdictions have the same human rights protections, such as protecting individuals because of their political beliefs. The following is a brief look at what human rights legislation across Canada tells us when dealing with employees’ political beliefs:
- Atlantic Provinces — In New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labradour, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, it is against the law to discriminate based on political belief, activity, opinion, or affiliation.
- Western Provinces — In British Columbia and Manitoba, it is against the law to discriminate based on political belief, association, or activity. Alberta and Saskatchewan do not define any of those terms or list them as prohibited grounds of discrimination in their respective human rights legislation.
- Ontario and federally regulated workplaces — In Ontario, political belief, activity, association, or opinion are not defined as prohibited grounds of discrimination. This is also true for federally regulated workplaces.
- Quebec — In Quebec political convictions is covered under Quebec’s Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms.
- Territories — The Yukon protects political belief, association, or activity under human rights legislation. The Northwest Territories also covers this ground, but uses the term political association or political belief. In Nunavut, political belief, activity, association, or opinion are not considered prohibited grounds of discrimination.
As a result of these differences, it is important to explain what is meant by these terms.
Human Rights Commissions will give this ground a broad and purposive interpretation consistent with obligations under international law, freedom of expression rights guaranteed under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and in keeping with the approach taken by tribunals in other Canadian jurisdictions where this kind of discrimination is expressly prohibited.
Political belief a ‘fundamental right’
Courts have held that political belief is a fundamental human right that is recognized in the Charter and in international human rights law, and that it is a right that is connected to the rights and listed in the Charter (freedom of expression, thought, belief, assembly and association).
“Political belief, association or activity” includes but is not limited to:
- Affiliation with a political party;
- Adhering to a specific ideology;
- Being a member of an organized lobby or association engaging in public advocacy;
- Promoting the establishment of, or working for, a professional, business or trade association;
- Participating in or being affiliated with a political protest or movement;
- Running for office;
- Working for a political candidate.
Discrimination is differential treatment of, or failure to accommodate, an individual on the basis of the individual’s actual or presumed membership in or association with some class or group of persons as set out in human rights legislation, rather than on the basis of personal merit.
Although not all Canadian jurisdictions currently define or include political belief, activity, association or opinion as prohibited grounds of discrimination, employers should be proactive by ensuring that their anti-harassment/anti-discrimination policies and measures not only deal with respect when it comes to employees’ political beliefs, activities, associations or opinions, but also prevent employees’ individual’s political beliefs, activities, associations or opinions from being imposed on others.
In the jurisdictions where political belief, activity, association or opinion are listed as prohibited grounds of discrimination, employers must take action if they know or ought to have known about inappropriate behaviour based on political belief, activity or association. This means, employers “have a responsibility to ensure that they are not taking part in, condoning or allowing discrimination or harassment to occur based on this prohibited ground”.
Also, employers have a duty to accommodate needs related to political belief, activity, association or opinion to the point of undue hardship.
[A]n employer must take steps to eliminate disadvantages to employees resulting from rules, practices or physical barriers that have or may have an adverse impact on individuals or groups covered under human rights legislation. To accomplish this goal, an employer must determine what barriers might affect the person requesting accommodation, explore options for removing those barriers and accommodate by using reasonable efforts to the point of undue hardship.”
Meeting human rights requirements
Employers can take a number of steps to prevent and appropriately address human rights complaints specifically on the basis of political belief, activity or association, and they include among others:
- Putting in place effective education programs and policies that help those in the workplace understand about respecting the political views, activities and associations of fellow co-workers, and the type of conduct that is required when dealing with those who have different political beliefs, activities and associations (establish respectful limits when there are political discussions in the workplace);
- Training those in the workplace regarding the company anti-discrimination, anti-harassment and accommodation policies concerning this ground, be proactive in ongoing monitoring, implement strategies and evaluate with a view to improve; and
- Re-examining existing policies and creating additional policies and procedures in the workplace that promote acceptance of all individuals in the workplace – this can involve policies relating to recruiting attempts, or inclusive events in the workplace.
What can employers do to make sure workplace partisan political arguments don’t get out of hand?
So when the conversation of politics spills into the workplace, how should employers respond? What should their role be? According to Duggan (ibid), there are five ways managers can keep productivity levels high:
- Do not micromanage employees. This includes “Cut[ting] employees some slack and give them space to stay informed in light of recent political news.”
- Focus on your goals. “Goals adds focus amidst the distraction and helps employees get their work done”.
- Encourage work-life integration. True work-life integration means that employees will bring their personal life into the office, including their political beliefs. “As a manager, do your best to accommodate the continuum of work-life integration by giving employees space to read up on news that matters to them and talk with their colleagues about political news.”
- Do not argue with employees. Arguments can bring about a breach in trust in the manager-employee relationship. “If you ever have the urge to argue with an employee, especially one you manage, change the subject before it takes a negative toll on your relationship with the employee.”
- Unite over work. It is a manager’s job to give employees the means to stay focused and productive. “When employees have the means to stay focused on work, it can actually feel like a respite. Find common ground in your overlapping work and focus your attention on meeting your work goals.”
Also, according to Forbes (ibid):
[D]on’t stand for disrespect… It’s completely possible for people to have opposing viewpoints without stooping to derogatory comments. When emotions are running high, a disagreement over political philosophies can deteriorate into personalized attacks. Before that happens, the best option is to agree to disagree—and then get back to work.
There is much to consider as an employer when it comes to the presence of political talk and voicing opinions in the workplace. As much as freedom of speech and affiliation are important values to advocate, employers must also ensure that all speech is carried out respectfully and free of discrimination, to maintain a workplace where diversity of opinion is an asset rather than a hindrance.
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