"What I want to try to do in the next few weeks is to unite as many Quebecers as possible," Legault said.
In Battou's case, she has worked for four years as a substitute teacher for the Marguerite Bourgeoys school board, so the grandfather clause would apply to her — as long as she stays put.
"You're allowed to keep your veil, but you're not allowed to be promoted," Battou remarked. "What does it mean? It's clearly discrimination."
Prepared to relocate
Battou said her first instinct when she learned details of the bill was to laugh, then she decided she would become a vocal opponent of Legault and his proposed legislation.
"I wouldn't let a man tell me to wear [the hijab]. I won't let a man tell me to remove it," she said.
"We're paid really badly in Quebec, and then, on top of that, he wants me to remove my veil while I teach?"
She is resolved to leave the province if the law passes.
If others follow suit, it will exacerbate Quebec's existing teacher shortage, Battou points out. And she says meeting teachers of diverse backgrounds is a plus, not a minus, for Quebec students.
"One teacher veiled here and there won't change a Quebecer's life: it just makes students more inclusive," Battou said.
Attack on religious freedom: teachers' union
Bill 21 is already being widely condemned by teachers' unions and by school boards.
Sylvain Mallette, president of the Fédération autonome de l'Enseignement, a labour group representing representing 43,000 teachers, said the proposal amounts to an attack on religious freedom and the rule of law.
"Not only does this bill violate freedom of religion and conscience, but it also threatens the working conditions of teachers," he said.
Just weeks ago, the province announced a plan to expand kindergarten to four-year-olds across the province, starting with 250 new classrooms next fall.
That promise that will require school boards to hire hundreds of new teachers.
The Quebec English School Boards Association, which represents English-language school boards across the province, said the bill goes against the spirit of inclusiveness its schools have tried to foster.
"Bill 21 is a divisive and an unnecessary piece of legislation that can only lead to societal discrimination," Dan Lamoureux, the association's president, said in a statement.
On Wednesday, the evening before the bill was even tabled, the English Montreal School Board adopted a motion saying it won'timplement the lawif it is adopted.