Close X
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

No Room For Donald Trump's Politics In Conservative Party, Rona Ambrose Says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Dec, 2015 12:46 PM
    OTTAWA — Donald Trump may be running to lead America's right-wing political party, but his views aren't welcome by Canada's right-wing party, the interim leader of the Conservatives says.
     
    Trump's position should not even be considered right-wing, but something far beyond that, said Rona Ambrose in a wide-ranging year-end interview with The Canadian Press.
     
    "I think he's off the spectrum, frankly," Ambrose said. "That's not a voice that we welcome in our party."
     
    Earlier this month, Trump, who is hoping to lead the Republican party in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, called for a temporary ban on Muslim immigration to the United States. He has also advocated for Syrian refugees to be registered in a national database and has suggested Muslims should carry ID cards.
     
    Backlash against Muslims in the U.S. has been growing in recent months and Trump's comments have been blamed for fanning those flames. While the comments have drawn widespread condemnation, polls suggest around half of Republicans support those positions.
     
    Ambrose said she's thankful that kind of discourse isn't happening among Canada's political leadership, but acknowledged Trump's remarks come with consequences.
     
    "I think what happens is, it fuels the fire for people that have very bad intentions and then they act," she said. 
     
    "There's no excuse for that, Donald Trump is not an excuse . . . I don't think his rhetoric helps the case."
     
     
    Canada has not been immune from anti-Muslim backlash either. After the attacks in Paris linked to Islamic extremists, a mosque in Peterborough, Ont., was set on fire and a Muslim woman was attacked in Toronto.
     
    Ambrose said that when she spoke out publicly against some of those incidents, she was also criticized.
     
    If that criticism — and any other type of anti-Muslim sentiment in Canada — comes from people purporting to be part of the Conservatives, they aren't, she said.
     
    "I won't take ownership of any of those people," she said.
     
    The Conservatives have been accused in the past of not doing enough to combat Islamophobia — and potentially exacerbating it.  
     
    Two policy promises during the campaign — a tip line to report "barbaric cultural practices" and a decision to prioritize Christians in refugee resettlement programs devoted to the Syrian crisis, where most of the victims are Muslim — were seen by some Muslims as deliberate provocations.
     
    Ambrose has said before she believed the tip line wasn't a helpful policy, but said her work with abused women has shown there is such a thing as "barbaric practices" and more needs to be done.
     
    "The way to get to those issues is to work with these young women closely and offer them shelter when they need help because they are fleeing from oppression and sometimes very serious abuse and violence; and if we're talking about honour crimes or other issues, these young women need help," she said.
     
     
    On refugees, she said the focus needs to be on helping the most vulnerable, and Christians are among them. To dismiss the idea there's no religious group that is more vulnerable than others is to dismiss some of the problem in Syria, she said.
     
    But the way the Conservatives are now approaching the refugee file — advocating for a slow-down in the resettlement timeline and more assistance for private sponsors — is an example of the new tone she wants to set for debate in the House, Ambrose said.
     
    It's not just about raising issues that are important to Conservatives, but to all Canadians, she said, and in a civil way.
     
    "Our job is to ask good, tough questions but there is no need to be petty in the House of Commons. It starts at the top," she said.
     
    In the coming months, Ambrose said, she will be working to expand outreach to existing party supporters and potential new ones ahead of the coming leadership race.
     
    The foundation of the party is strong, she said. In October, the Conservatives garnered 31.9 per cent of popular support, down about eight percentage points from the previous election.
     
    With the Liberals appearing to hue further left than the NDP, Ambrose said the party thinks it has room to pick up some of their more fiscally conservative supporters.
     
    She said there is also room for the Conservatives to grow their own policy playbook.
     
    Their philosophy of favouring market-based approaches could be applied, she said, to issues like the environment.
     
     
    "That can happen in a leadership race, if a leadership candidate has a vision. This is where these kind of new visions come forward," she said.
     
    "And that's an exciting time for a party." 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Keith Caouette, Man Considered High Risk To Reoffend Missing From Vancouver Halfway House

    Keith Caouette, Man Considered High Risk To Reoffend Missing From Vancouver Halfway House
    Police say he is a two-time federal offender who has served 14 years in prison for kidnapping and sexual assault with a weapon.

    Keith Caouette, Man Considered High Risk To Reoffend Missing From Vancouver Halfway House

    Evacuation Alert Issued In Pemberton, B.C. Over Fears Of Mudslide

    Evacuation Alert Issued In Pemberton, B.C. Over Fears Of Mudslide
    Thirty-eight properties in a small community northeast of Pemberton, B.C., have been placed on an evacuation alert just days after a mudslide.

    Evacuation Alert Issued In Pemberton, B.C. Over Fears Of Mudslide

    B.C. Invests Up To $10 Million To Prevent Wildfires, $5 Million To Tackle Crime

    Premier Christy Clark has announced millions of dollars in funding for projects ranging from crime and forest-fire prevention to jumpstarting rural economies.

    B.C. Invests Up To $10 Million To Prevent Wildfires, $5 Million To Tackle Crime

    Jesse Rau, Bus Driver Fired Amid Pride Controversy Running For Christian Heritage Party

    Jesse Rau, Bus Driver Fired Amid Pride Controversy Running For Christian Heritage Party
    Jesse Rau says he will run in the riding of Calgary Signal Hill, where the other candidates include former provincial cabinet minister Ron Liepert for the Conservatives, Khalis Ahmed of the NDP and Liberal Kerry Cundal.

    Jesse Rau, Bus Driver Fired Amid Pride Controversy Running For Christian Heritage Party

    Jonathan Phillips, Brain-Injured B.C. Man Says Sorry After Pleading Guilty To Multiple Thefts

    Jonathan Phillips, Brain-Injured B.C. Man Says Sorry After Pleading Guilty To Multiple Thefts
     A man who went on a bizarre crime spree before taking on three deputy sheriffs while in custody has been sentenced to time served and must get treatment for a brain injury.

    Jonathan Phillips, Brain-Injured B.C. Man Says Sorry After Pleading Guilty To Multiple Thefts

    Sex Consensual But Ontario Pharmacist Mohamed Hanif's Licence Loss Ruled Constitutional

    Sex Consensual But Ontario Pharmacist Mohamed Hanif's Licence Loss Ruled Constitutional
    pharmacist whose licence was automatically revoked because he had consensual sex with a patient has lost his bid to have the relevant rules governing health professionals thrown out as unconstitutional.

    Sex Consensual But Ontario Pharmacist Mohamed Hanif's Licence Loss Ruled Constitutional