Close X
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
ADVT 
National

Rustad's Nuremberg, Nazi comparisons to COVID-19 measures 'regrettable,' says Eby

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Oct, 2024 03:49 PM
  • Rustad's Nuremberg, Nazi comparisons to COVID-19 measures 'regrettable,' says Eby

British Columbia's election campaign was dragged far off course Monday as the two main party leaders were forced to comment about comparisons of the Nuremberg trials of Nazi war criminals to COVID-19 pandemic health measures.

Vandalism at the property of a Vancouver billionaire, who erected a large sign critical of B.C.'s New Democrats, also diverted leaders off their messages.

The controversial comparisons supporting a Nuremberg-like investigation of B.C. COVID-19 health officials, and the spray-paint vandalism of Lululemon founder Chip Wilson's property come as the leaders prepare for Tuesday's televised debate, which signals a critical juncture of the campaign.

NDP Leader David Eby, B.C. Conservative Leader John Rustad and Green Party Leader Sonia Furstenau will face each other under the glare of lights during the only televised debate of the campaign.

Rustad apologized Monday for his prior comments about the Nuremberg trials and COVID-19 measures that "offended some people."

"My comments in and around that relating in any way relating to the two, I apologize for that," he said at a news conference in downtown Vancouver. "That certainly was not my intent with regards to that issue."

Rustad posted a statement on social media Sunday to "clarify" his comments after video surfaced with him saying his party would "certainly be participating with other jurisdictions."

Rustad made the comments after being asked at an online meeting in July about where he stood on "Nuremberg 2.0," in reference to an idea that those behind public health measures established during the pandemic should be put on trial.

The B.C. Conservative leader said in a statement on the social media platform X that he "misunderstood the question" about whether he supported "Nuremberg 2.0."

He said it's a "distortion of history" to compare pandemic public health measures with Nazi Germany or the Nuremberg trials, which sought accountability for the Holocaust.

He said he made the comments during a conversation with members of the BC Public Service Employees for Freedom group.

Rustad was in Vancouver to layout his party’s platform around public safety near the site where a man's hand was severed in an attack last month. 

He promised a Conservative government would create a new court to handle minor offences and hire more judges, sheriffs and front line police officers, while also ending the province’s decriminalization of small amounts of certain illicit drugs.

Eby called Rustad's comments "regrettable," at a news conference in Maple Ridge where he announced plans to build a new school in the community and promised to increase child care workers and classroom counsellors at B.C. public schools.

"To be entertaining suggestions that we would put public health officials, doctors and nurses who ran vaccine programs, who responded in the depths of the pandemic, on trial similar to Nazi war criminals, is shameful. It's bizarre," he said. "It's really regrettable."

The issue is the latest in a series of unscripted moments on the campaign, which also included the erection of a large sign outside Wilson's Vancouver home last week, calling the NDP "communist."

Photos on social media show the sign and the gates to Wilson's $81-million home vandalized with crude graffiti about the athletic clothing apparel founder.

Vancouver Police say they're investigating after receiving a report.

Eby said the sign on Wilson's property is a symbol of the political divide in this election.

"The sign on Chip Wilson's property, it reflects whose side John Rustad's on," he said. "He's on the side of Chip Wilson. He's on the side of billionaires and the real estate speculators. I'm on the side of the people who are trying to get by who are facing higher costs and struggling in different ways."

Eby said the issues people are facing will not be resolved with spray paint.

"The problem's getting solved with votes," he said.

Eby, at a campaign event at Maple Ridge, promised education plans that include a mental health counsellor in every school and an educational assistant for all classrooms from kindergarten to Grade 3. 

He also said there would be expanded on-site school child care.

Greens Leader Sonia Furstenau in Victoria said the party would support what she called a successful model of transitional housing that is employed in Duncan on Vancouver Island.

She said "The Village" model, which sees people housed in small individual housing units, offers "practical solutions for the homelessness crisis."

As the Oct. 19 election day approaches, advance voting will also be available Oct. 10 to 13 and Oct. 15 to 16.

MORE National ARTICLES

VPD says one man dead, another's hand cut off, in stranger attacks

VPD says one man dead, another's hand cut off, in stranger attacks
Vancouver police say a man has been arrested after a pair of "unprovoked stranger attacks" in the city's downtown that left one man dead and severed another victim's hand. Chief Constable Adam Palmer says police believe the early morning attacks near the Queen Elizabeth Theatre were "completely random," and that such incidents "shake our collective sense of comfort and safety."

VPD says one man dead, another's hand cut off, in stranger attacks

'The deal is done:' NDP Leader pulls out of supply and confidence deal with Liberals

'The deal is done:' NDP Leader pulls out of supply and confidence deal with Liberals
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh has "ripped up" the supply and confidence deal with the Liberals that helped keep the minority government in power. In a video posted Wednesday afternoon, Singh said he notified Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of the decision. 

'The deal is done:' NDP Leader pulls out of supply and confidence deal with Liberals

Two men dead after small plane crashes at northern Alberta airport

Two men dead after small plane crashes at northern Alberta airport
Mounties say two men are dead after a small plane crashed at an airport in a northwestern Alberta. The plane went down Tuesday on the grounds of the Peace River Airport. RCMP say a 30-year-old man who had been living Manning, Alta., and a 27-year-old resident of Australia died at the scene.

Two men dead after small plane crashes at northern Alberta airport

Statistics Canada says country posted $684M merchandise trade surplus in July

Statistics Canada says country posted $684M merchandise trade surplus in July
Statistics Canada says the country posted a merchandise trade surplus of $684 million in July. The result compared with a revised deficit of $179 million in June. The initial reading for June had shown a surplus of $638 million.

Statistics Canada says country posted $684M merchandise trade surplus in July

NDP pulling out of supply and confidence deal with Liberals

NDP pulling out of supply and confidence deal with Liberals
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh has ripped up the supply and confidence deal with the Liberals that helped keep the minority government in power.  In a social media video posted Wednesday afternoon, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said he notified Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of the decision. 

NDP pulling out of supply and confidence deal with Liberals

Man arrested over two serious incidents near downtown Vancouver theatre

Man arrested over two serious incidents near downtown Vancouver theatre
Vancouver police say a man has been arrested in connection with two serious incidents in the downtown area. Police say on social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter, that the crime scenes are on Georgia Street near Homer and Hamilton streets.

Man arrested over two serious incidents near downtown Vancouver theatre