Brampton, Ontario
Can this young lawyer be our next Member of Parliament (MP)?
Analysis
Teodoro ‘Ted’ Alcuitas
Editor, PhilippineCanadianNews.Com
Twenty four years after the first Filipino-Canadian was elected to Parliament in 1997, a Toronto lawyer is trying to break the spell and become the second to get elected.
Paul Jonathan Saguil is seeking the Liberal nomination for the riding of Brampton Centre in Ontario hoping to follow Dr. Rey Pagtakhan of Winnipeg, the first Filipino elected to Parliament. Pagtakhan, a Liberal, served for four terms from 1997 to 2004. The federal election is not called yet but is expected to happen before the end of the year.
The 39-year old is Deputy Head of TD Bank Group’s Sanctions Compliance and Anti-Bribery Program. TD is Canada’s largest bank in terms of assets. He is as part of the Global Anti-Money Laundering Department, where he leads sanctions and anti-corruption efforts targeting child pornographers, human traffickers, and war criminals.
Born in Manila, Saguil immigrated to Canada at the age of nine with his parents in 1991 settling in Brampton, Ontario.
He went to Chaminade College School in Toronto, an all-boys Catholic secondary, obtained his B.A. (Hons.) in Philosophy from York University in 2004 and his law degree from York University- Osgoode Law School in 2007.
In a wide-ranging interview by Zoom from his home in Toronto, Saguil shared his journey as a young immigrant and his experiences facing challenges in his professional and volunteer work.
An award-winning lawyer with a long record of civic engagement and championing inclusion, Saguil has appeared before the Supreme Court of Canada, the Federal Court, and all levels of court in Ontario.
He taught internationally-trained lawyers at the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Law and has served on several not-for-profit boards including as chair of the Law Society of Ontario Equity Advisory Group and the Ontario Bar Association’s Equality Committee. In 2019 he was appointed to the Judicial Advisory Committee for the Greater Toronto Area (GTA).
Poster child for diversity
During our conversation, he never talked about his personal sacrifices in pursuing his causes, but in a 2017 interview with Toronto’s Precedent magazine for lawyers, he revealed the personal toll on his life that ended a personal relationship.
He never asked to be a poster child for diversity, according to the magazine. But in 2008, as a first-year associate at Stockwoods LLP., he decided to be open about the fact that he’s gay.
We ask him if he was comfortable with the issue of his gender identity.
“I have always been fighting against discrimination in all forms, and making sure that people have the same opportunities whether you are of a different racial background or sexual orientation. “
“One type of discrimination affects everyone and they use the same language.”
He related how he encountered discrimination in the legal profession where he is mistaken whether he was the client or the lawyer. Or during a phone conversation where people second guess if he is Filipino because his name is not familiar.
Does he still encounter the same type of discrimination now?
“Sometimes, but not always because of my public profile perhaps. But what about others? Young Filipino lawyers doesn’t have to be asked, gay employees doesn’t have to struggle because of their sexuality.”
While the initiatives he has pursued are bearing fruit, Saguil fears that they have started to outlive their usefulness: he often sees the exact same people showing up at diversity events. “Sometimes it’s frustrating. I look around the room and think, Are we just in an echo chamber?”, he told Precedent.
The increase in the number of racialized lawyers has forced the profession to take their concerns seriously: “We can’t be silenced anymore,” he asserts.
On anti-Asian hate crimes
He believes racism is not new but the fact more more people are talking about it is new. He then relates a personal experience that is embedded in his mind.
“When our family came to Canada, the immigration officer at the airport asked my mom about her occupation – you are a housekeeper? No, I am an Accountant, his mother retorted.”
Like many others she has to go through the discrimination of not having their professions recognized so she has to struggle to study again.
Saguil teaches a course at the University of Toronto to train foreign-educated lawyers get accredited.
Discrimination or racism doesn’t have to be physical violence alone but manifests itself in other forms as well.
“If a worker does not get paid sick leave, that is discrimination and we know that many of our kababayans are front-line workers. It is systemic violence if it is keeping them from living like any other Canadian lives.”
What can you do if you win?
“As a parliamentarian, I will bring my personal experiences and background to the table, and while other people also suffer discrimination, our own Filipino experience is unique to us.”
He says he will try to give “voice” to our kababayans as is expected of him as a Filipino parliamentarian.
His presence in Parliament he hopes, will be seen as an example- an inspiration for others.
My prayers will be with you as it is time to have a Canadian Pilipino to bring a cleaner service oriented public servant to this country.
I wish to chat with you and will be excited to hear from you.
I am from Langley BC and will God willing enter politics when I am ready.
In the meantime, I will follow your career.
GOD BLESS
luz lopezdee
SURREY SENIOR PLANNING TABLE
Hi folks’
I think paul saguil is an honorable individual I can trust his conviction and understand his thorough and diligent with conviction, and I strongly believe his hard work was a key to where he is now and let’s wish and support his vision and say if he can brought three acute issues to parliament (1.) Human trafficking (2.) Miscarriage of justice (3.) the public outcry policy in the Long term Care Homes , these must be change big time… our goal is to meet Mr, Paul Saguil in person hopefully before Election kudos to your new horizon…