Group sues Quebec City for cancelling July show of U.S. Christian singer Sean Feucht
A group associated with the American Christian singer Sean Feucht is suing Quebec City’s municipal administration after it cancelled one of his planned shows this past July.
Burn 24/7 Canada, a Christian non-profit based in British Columbia, launched the lawsuit, which alleges the city’s actions amounted to an attack on its rights to freedom of expression and religion. It also was the organizer behind the singer’s Canadian tour that summer, which saw several shows cancelled amid outcry over his anti-abortion views and staunch support of U.S. President Donald Trump.
“We all have a fundamental right to express our opinions, regardless of whether they’re popular or not,” said John Carpay, the president of Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms, which says it is financing the lawsuit.
The lawsuit filed in Quebec Superior Court on Monday is demanding $5,000 in damages from the city and roughly $2,600 as reimbursement for what it says it spent to rent the venue. Feucht is listed as a third party in the case, not as one of the plaintiffs.


