Close X
Sunday, October 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

O'Toole pitches Tories as Canada Day defenders

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Jun, 2021 12:00 PM
  • O'Toole pitches Tories as Canada Day defenders

The Conservative Party of Canada is positioning itself as the defender of Canada Day, as more communities decide to skip celebrations out of respect for First Nations discovering unmarked burial sites at former residential schools.

Leaders in different cities and towns from across the country have called into question the appropriateness of holding fireworks and festivities on July 1 since the findings were first reported.

The most recent include the northern Manitoba town of Churchill and two Saskatchewan communities.

Cowessess First Nation east of Regina announced last week that ground- penetrating radar detected 751 unmarked graves at the former Marieval Indian Residential School. The news followed the discovery of what are believed to be the remains of 215 children at another former site in Kamloops, B.C.

Hours before the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations announced last Wednesday that the Cowessess First Nation had discovered a grave site, Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole told his caucus in a speech that he can't stay silent when there are calls to cancel Canada Day.

He said reconciliation is not about tearing Canada down, and no country could stand up to close scrutiny of its legacy, but whatever pain felt from the wrongs committed in Canada should be used as motivation to build a better future.

On Saturday, the party put a question out on social media: "Who is asking Canadians whether they want Canada Day to be cancelled?"

O'Toole's remarks echo his position as the "true blue" candidate in last summer's race to lead the party, where he campaigned against "cancel culture" and removing statues from Canada's historical past.

After the discovery at Cowessess, Alberta Member of Parliament Michelle Rempel Garner took to social media late Friday to respond to an article headlined, "Indigenous people call on Calgary to scale back or cancel Canada Day celebrations."

"And we should listen," she wrote on Twitter, saying "political cost be damned."

She expanded on her thoughts with a Facebook post in which she said some may feel changing how Canada Day is marked could be detrimental to the country, but including thoughts for deceased Indigenous children and what needs to happen next "into a day on which we traditionally give gratitude for the good that exists in our nation is only right and just."

"We should be proud and grateful for the good that exists in our nation. But we cannot use that celebration as an excuse to continue to blind ourselves to a truth we have never adequately confronted, or allow it to exacerbate the pain of injustice; we must listen to Indigenous voices and act," Rempel Garner said in the post.

"On July 1, we can and should do both."

In an interview with Global's "The West Block" aired on Sunday, O'Toole also suggested he may be the only federal leader who's proud of Canada that's running to be the next prime minister in a general election many speculate may happen this year.

The leader also said in the interview that it appears Trudeau and some of his Liberal cabinet ministers "almost want to cancel Canada Day because we failed in the past," after those politicians stated July 1 should be a time of reflection.

Federal Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller on Sunday tweeted, "It is one thing to reflect on celebration of Canada Day and quite another to turn Canada Day into a rallying cry designed to whip up a political base, particularly at a time when Indigenous Peoples are hurting."

A request for comment from O'Toole's office has yet to be returned, as have asks to hear from Saskatchewan Conservative MPs Cathay Wagantall and Gary Vidal, the party's critic for Indigenous services.

Both of their ridings include communities that have decided against holding July 1 celebrations.

MORE National ARTICLES

AstraZeneca recipients can get mRNA for 2nd dose

AstraZeneca recipients can get mRNA for 2nd dose
NACI has already said people can mix and match vaccines within the same vaccine family — so the mRNA vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna can be mixed and matched, or the viral vector vaccines from AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson.    

AstraZeneca recipients can get mRNA for 2nd dose

PM promises cities help to lower housing costs

PM promises cities help to lower housing costs
The cost of housing has risen across the country driven by a mix of low interest rates and demand outstripping supply as Canadians working from home look for more space.

PM promises cities help to lower housing costs

More arrests at B.C. logging blockade

More arrests at B.C. logging blockade
The Mounties say since enforcement of the court injunction began on May 17, 142 people have been arrested, at least nine of whom have been arrested more than once.

More arrests at B.C. logging blockade

B.C. COVID cases down, but stay vigilant: doctor

B.C. COVID cases down, but stay vigilant: doctor
"We have seen new outbreaks in recent days and we all need to take our precautions to prevent more," she says, adding masks will still need to be worn until about July even by people who have had two doses of vaccine because vaccines alone are not fully protective against infection.    

B.C. COVID cases down, but stay vigilant: doctor

Canada won't rush border reopening: Trudeau

Canada won't rush border reopening: Trudeau
Canada won't be rushed into reopening its border with the United States to non-essential travel, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Monday as new COVID-19 case counts continued to drop in much of the country.

Canada won't rush border reopening: Trudeau

PM using cane after sprains ankle playing Frisbee

PM using cane after sprains ankle playing Frisbee
The prime minister was spotted Monday walking with a cane after leaving an event announcing federal loans for Black entrepreneurs. Spokesman Alex Wellstead says Trudeau sprained his ankle while playing Frisbee with his children at home over the weekend.

PM using cane after sprains ankle playing Frisbee