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Ontario Premier Doug Ford speaks to the media during a funding announcement in Hamilton, Ont., Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Carlos Osorio

Court tosses out Ontario’s bid to pre-emptively block Al-Quds Day rally

Mar 14, 2026 | 12:37 PM

TORONTO — A Toronto pro-Palestinian demonstration is underway after an Ontario judge tossed out the government’s move to pre-emptively block it Saturday.

The court dismissed the 11th hour request by Premier Doug Ford’s government less than an hour before the Al-Quds Day rally outside the U.S. Consulate in downtown Toronto began.

Ford on Friday said he had told his attorney general to seek an injunction against the demonstration, calling it a “breeding ground for hate and antisemitism.”

His allegations were swiftly condemned by civil liberty groups, with organizers calling the injunction request an attempt to silence Palestinian solidarity and criticism of Israel.

After the court’s decision on Saturday, Ford said in a social media post he was “extremely disappointed” and that Al-Quds Day “has long been a venue for antisemitism, hatred, intimidation and the glorification of terrorism.”

“While the judge cited Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms, when we talk about rights we need to be clear that every person has the right to safety and security,” the post said.

“We need to be clear that no one in Canada has the right to incite violence or free licence to intimidate and hate.”

However, during Saturday’s court hearing, lawyers for the province acknowledged there was no evidence the rallies had ever resulted in criminal charges against demonstrators.

Police have said they planned to expand their presence at the rally citing heightened unease around the U.S.-Israeli war in Iran and the shots fired at three synagogues and the U.S. Consulate in the past two weeks.

The global rally is broadly billed as an event for solidarity with Palestinians and an end to Israeli occupation of their territories. Organizers in Toronto promoted this year’s event with a call for “no war on Iran and Lebanon”.

Al-Quds, taken from the Arabic word for Jerusalem, has been a magnet for controversy in part because it was popularized in Iran after the 1979 revolution.

One of Ford’s first promises as premier in 2018 was an outright ban on the protest. The British government supported a ban on this year’s rally in London.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 14, 2026.

The Canadian Press