A court in Quebec has granted three men in a homosexual polyamorous relationship full legal parental rights over a three-year-old girl, marking one of the most radical redefinitions of family yet seen in Canada. The case follows a 2025 ruling declaring that limiting children to one mother and one father was “unconstitutional,” opening the door to so-called “multi-parent” households.
The men—Eric LeBlanc, Jonathan Bédard, and Justin Maheu—had been fostering the child for two years before being formally authorized to adopt her. Under the new framework, the court recognized all three as equal “parents,” erasing the natural understanding that a child’s rightful guardians are a mother and a father.
This is not an expansion of parental rights but a direct assault on the natural family and the well-being of children. By normalizing polyamorous arrangements, the state is sending the message that motherhood and fatherhood are interchangeable—and optional. Such experiments put ideology ahead of children’s needs for stability and the unique contributions of both a mother and a father.
This ruling is the logical consequence of Canada’s decades-long dismantling of traditional marriage and family law. Once marriage was redefined, there was no limiting principle to prevent the recognition of increasingly radical family structures.
Quebec’s government has appealed the underlying judicial ruling, but for now, a young girl is at the center of a dangerous social experiment. This case is not about expanding love or care—it is about the state rewriting nature itself, with children paying the price.