Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Poilievre delivers first speech to AFN, leaders confront him about Harper's legacy

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Jul, 2024 10:37 AM
  • Poilievre delivers first speech to AFN, leaders confront him about Harper's legacy

First Nations chiefs have heard enough promises and "performative reconciliation," Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said Thursday, adding they deserve a partnership based on honest conversations.

It was the first time Poilievre was addressing the Assembly of First Nations, an organization representing more than 600 First Nations that had a tense relationship with the Conservatives when former prime minister Stephen Harper was in power.

In 2018, former Conservative leader Andrew Scheer was booed at an AFN assembly when he was unable to explain how his policies would differ from Harper's.

AFN National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak has said she wants to turn a page from that legacy, and Poilievre thanked her for inviting him to address the annual general assembly underway this week in Montreal. 

Since he became leader in September 2022, Poilievre had only sent pre-recorded remarks to AFN events.

On Thursday, some chiefs appeared to like some of what the Conservative leader had to say, applauding generously during a speech that outlined his commitments to advancing economic reconciliation with First Nations and creating jobs, especially through resource development. 

"We believe that economic reconciliation is part of social progress," Poilievre said. "We need jobs and opportunity for First Nations communities." 

Instead of companies relying on temporary foreign workers to fill jobs, that work should go to Indigenous youth, Poilievre said. 

He also said he doesn't believe in "cancelling or denying history," but rather that more stories of First Nations leaders and heroes should be taught alongside European ones. 

It was a nod to disagreements Conservatives have had with decisions to remove statues or rename buildings and roads that honoured Canadians with ties to Canada's unflattering legacy of residential schools.

Poilievre ended his speech acknowledging the relationship will not be easy. 

"We won't always agree and you've heard enough promises and enough performative reconciliation," he said. 

"What we need are honest and direct conversations and a partnership based on a nation-to-nation relationship and mutual respect. I come here to offer that respect in total humility." 

Poilievre was confronted about his priorities on Indigenous issues and the actions of Harper's government during a question-and-answer session after his remarks.

Judy Wilson, a delegate at the gathering, said it should be acknowledged that a handful of veterans and representatives from the assembly's LGBTQ+ council stood silently and turned their back on Poilievre while he spoke. 

She then told Poilievre that he did not mention the issue of murdered and missing Indigenous women or the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, as well as inherent rights, during the speech.

Harper's government declined to call a national inquiry into murdered and missing Indigenous women and girls, but Prime Minister Justin Trudeau did, coming to power in 2015 on a promise to establish a better relationship with Indigenous Peoples. 

"You also failed to recognize our residential school survivors," Wilson told Poilievre. 

"If you're working to be the next prime minister in Canada, it tells me you have a lot of education to do in those fronts." 

In his speech, Poilievre said it was the former Conservative government that delivered the historic 2008 apology on behalf of Canada for forcing thousands of First Nations, Métis and Inuit children to attend the government-funded church-run schools.

He did not mention the personal apology he had to make the day after that. 

Hours before Harper issued the residential schools apology, Poilievre had told a radio station he questioned the value of compensating residential school survivors, instead of pushing the values of "hard work and independence." 

On Thursday, Poilievre said Conservatives will work to redress historic discrimination in the child-welfare system and resolve "other outstanding issues," which Wilson and Mary Teegee, a child-welfare advocate, raised during the question-and-answer period.

The AFN and the government reached a historic deal to reform child welfare this week. 

That came after more than 17 years after the organization, along with the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society, initiated a human-rights complaint over chronic government underfunding of child welfare services on reserves. 

The Harper government was heavily criticized for fighting that complaint in court for years. 

In turn, the Liberals have faced criticism for failing to act to implement orders made by the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal after its finding that First Nations children were discriminated against.

MORE National ARTICLES

Two B.C. community newspapers publish their last editions this week

Two B.C. community newspapers publish their last editions this week
Two newspapers in British Columbia are publishing their last editions this week, eliminating coverage by community papers for a large swath of the province's northeast. Glacier Media announced it is shutting down both the Dawson Creek Mirror and the Alaska Highway News out of Fort St. John.

Two B.C. community newspapers publish their last editions this week

Urn stolen in North Vancouver

Urn stolen in North Vancouver
Mounties in North Vancouver are asking for the public's help in locating an urn stolen from a car over the weekend. R-C-M-P say they received multiple reports of vehicle break-ins on West 21st Street around 10:30 Saturday morning.  

Urn stolen in North Vancouver

B.C. to bring in law forcing Surrey to go with municipal police force

B.C. to bring in law forcing Surrey to go with municipal police force
British Columbia Solicitor General Mike Farnworth has introduced legislation that will require the City of Surrey to provide policing with a municipal force in the latest jurisdictional salvo over the RCMP and the Surrey Police Service. The update in the Police Act also gives the province the authority to cancel the RCMP contract it has with Surrey, B.C.'s second most populous city behind Vancouver.   

B.C. to bring in law forcing Surrey to go with municipal police force

Fifth Canadian dies in Israel after Hamas attacks

Fifth Canadian dies in Israel after Hamas attacks
Global Affairs Canada has confirmed the death of a fifth Canadian in Israel after a series of attacks by Hamas militants, while Canadians in the besieged Gaza Strip still have no way to get out. Three other Canadians who were in Israel when the attacks happened Oct. 7 are still missing, officials said Sunday. Global Affairs did not provide details of the fifth person who died or those who are missing, citing privacy reasons.  

Fifth Canadian dies in Israel after Hamas attacks

First group of Canadians leave West Bank for Jordan as those in Gaza brace for worst

First group of Canadians leave West Bank for Jordan as those in Gaza brace for worst
Joly made the announcement this morning on X, the platform previously known as Twitter, thanking the Global Affairs staff who she says worked around the clock to make it happen. The federal government says 21 Canadians and foreign nationals took a bus out of the West Bank, a Palestinian territory that Israel has occupied since 1967, and where it has established settlements.

First group of Canadians leave West Bank for Jordan as those in Gaza brace for worst

B.C. to bring in new rules on short-term rentals to create more housing

B.C. to bring in new rules on short-term rentals to create more housing
Premier David Eby says the number of short-term rentals has ballooned in recent years and the government is taking action to reduce “profit-driven mini-hotel operators” by bringing in new enforcement tools. Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon introduced the bill in the legislature today, saying there has been "an explosion" of short-term rental units and this legislation will target areas with high housing needs.

B.C. to bring in new rules on short-term rentals to create more housing