Close X
Friday, December 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

NDP Candidate Harbaljit Singh Kahlon Apologizes For Former Views On Gay Marriage, Homosexuality

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Oct, 2015 12:01 PM
    An NDP candidate who once told a TV program same-sex marriage could lead to polygamy and public nudity, is offering an apology and says he no longer holds those views.
     
    Harbaljit Singh Kahlon also said during the 2005 OMNI TV show that there is no research that gays are born homosexual.
     
     
    "I do not hold these views and apologize unreservedly for making these comments in 2005," Singh Kahlon said in a statement.
     
    "I want to reaffirm my commitment to protecting human rights for all people in all circumstances without exception."
     
    Singh Kahlon is one of the party's top candidates in the Greater Toronto Area, running in the hotly contested riding of Brampton East. He was the campaign chair to MPP Jagmeet Singh, deputy leader of the provincial NDP.
     
    On Tuesday, in nearby Mississauga-Malton, Jagdish Grewal was dropped as the official candidate for the Conservative Party for comments he made about conversion therapy for gay youth.
     
     
    Grewal stood by his position that parents of gays should have the "right to bring them back to their straight life," and has said he will continue to run.
     
    Singh Kahlon appeared on the Punjabi-Canadian television show Chardi Kalaa in 2005 which was discussing same-sex marriage. Same-sex marriage was made legal in Canada that year.
     
    "If we change for them, what are we going to be doing tomorrow? Are we going to be accepting people actively living in the nude?" Singh Kahlon said in English. He was identified as being with York University, where he was a business student.
     
    "There are other issues that would be classified as scaremongering, but these are obviously real issues that also come along with human rights," he added, using his hands to indicate quotation marks around the phrase human rights.
     
    Another student, identified as Jasdeep Walia, debated Kahlon and argued that Sikhism promoted tolerance of all people.
     
     
    "I think there's no research that says gays are born gay; it's a choice they make upon lust," Singh Kahlon said.
     
    NDP Leader Tom Mulcair told reporters Wednesday he has accepted Singh Kahlon's apology.
     
    "That candidate has apologized unreservedly for those comments and has evolved in his thinking and says it no longer reflects in any way his thinking," Mulcair said.
     
    Last month, the party said it was standing behind its candidate in Scarborough-Rouge Park, Rev. KM Shanthikumar, who opposes abortion and same-sex marriage.
     
     
    Shanthikumar said he stands by the NDP line on the issues, while keeping personal views.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Trial To Resume For Boy Charged In Death Of Cape Breton Teen Who Fell Under Bus

    Trial To Resume For Boy Charged In Death Of Cape Breton Teen Who Fell Under Bus
    The 15-year-old defendant is accused of pushing the older boy under the wheels of a moving school bus outside Sydney Academy last winter.

    Trial To Resume For Boy Charged In Death Of Cape Breton Teen Who Fell Under Bus

    Reported Distress Call By Plane In Southern Alberta Not True: Air Force

    Reported Distress Call By Plane In Southern Alberta Not True: Air Force
    A report of an aircraft distress call that prompted officials to close part of the Trans-Canada Highway in Alberta for a possible emergency landing has turned out to be false.

    Reported Distress Call By Plane In Southern Alberta Not True: Air Force

    Opposition Parties Warn Sale Of Hydro One Will Drive Electricity Rates Higher

    The Progressive Conservatives and the New Democrats are opposed to the sale of Hydro One, warning it will lead to higher electricity prices.

    Opposition Parties Warn Sale Of Hydro One Will Drive Electricity Rates Higher

    Guy Turcotte, Quebec Doctor Set To Stand Trial A Second Time In The Deaths Of His Two Children

    Jury selection is set to begin Monday in the second trial of a former Quebec cardiologist who is charged with first-degree murder in the slayings of his two children.

    Guy Turcotte, Quebec Doctor Set To Stand Trial A Second Time In The Deaths Of His Two Children

    Deadline Approaches For Toronto To Declare Interest In Bidding For Olympics 2024

    The premier of Ontario says she hasn't decided whether her government will support an Olympic bid by the city of Toronto if one is made.

    Deadline Approaches For Toronto To Declare Interest In Bidding For Olympics 2024

    Groups To Protest Removal Of Historic Ruins Near Montreal Highway Construction Site

    Groups To Protest Removal Of Historic Ruins Near Montreal Highway Construction Site
    Archeologists unearthed the ruins of the former village earlier this summer. 

    Groups To Protest Removal Of Historic Ruins Near Montreal Highway Construction Site