Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Wildrose Distances Itself From Campus Group That Equated Feminism With Cancer

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Mar, 2017 11:48 AM
    EDMONTON — Alberta's Wildrose party is distancing itself from a campus club that used the Wildrose name and logo on an email that equated feminism with cancer.
     
    Wildrose Leader Brian Jean said Tuesday the University of Calgary group named Wildrose on Campus was never officially recognized by the party despite using its logo and wordmark.
     
    He says the party has now informed the club by letter to stop doing so.
     
    "It was inappropriate and wrong. What more can I say?" Jean told reporters at the legislature.
     
    "I was extremely disappointed, but let's be clear, this is not a registered association of the Wildrose."
     
    Jean said he was aware that the group was using the logo and the party is now working to get a handle on youth groups using Wildrose branding.
     
    "We will be taking steps to make sure it's a more formalized procedure, when people use our logo they do get permission to do so beforehand,"he said.
     
    Jean's comments come a day after the campus group sent out an email advertising the upcoming screening of the movie "The Red Pill," extolling men's rights.
     
    The email invited people to the screening by saying that feminism is cancer. As outrage grew on social media Monday night the group apologized and announced it had fired its communications director.
     
    Alberta's NDP government said in the legislature Tuesday that it's another example of a Wildrose party that displays intolerance toward women and minorities.
     
    NDP backbencher Sandra Jansen noted the cancer comments were being debated on the same day the province put forward a bill to help victims of sexual and domestic abuse sue their accusers.
     
    "While we take action on domestic violence, they say feminism is a horrible disease. That is the Wildrose," Jansen told the house.
     
    "They've proven time and time again they can't keep their true colours from showing."
     
    Deputy premier Sarah Hoffman took the fight to Jean directly.
     
    "Why is your party spending its time calling the fight for women's equality a cancer on our society?" Hoffman shouted across the aisle to Jean while answering one of his questions.
     
    "It happens again and again with you guys.
     
    "Another day, another half-hearted apology. Will the leader of the Opposition actually show some leadership (and) put an end to these Wildrose bozo eruptions?"
     
    Wildrose house leader Nathan Cooper later told the house Hoffman's remarks were beyond the pale and beneath the dignity of the chamber.
     
    "Let me be very clear that no one in this caucus thinks or agrees with statements that were made by Wildrose on Campus," said Cooper.
     
    "The statements that were made are totally inappropriate, completely wrong and do not represent myself or any member of this caucus."
     
    The Wildrose has been fighting a label of intolerance. In the 2012 election, the party was criticized for accepting a candidate who had warned that gays needed to change their ways or face an afterlife in hell's "lake of fire."
     
    Last year, Jean himself apologized after he publicly joked that it was against the law to "beat" Alberta Premier Rachel Notley.
     
    Notley and many female members of her cabinet, including Hoffman and Environment Minister Shannon Phillips, have been the target of online slurs, abuse, and threats.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Fort McMurray Fire Chiefs Retires, Says No Regrets In Handling Of Wildfire

    Fort McMurray Fire Chiefs Retires, Says No Regrets In Handling Of Wildfire
    Darby Allen celebrated his retirement by having cake with colleagues on Thursday.

    Fort McMurray Fire Chiefs Retires, Says No Regrets In Handling Of Wildfire

    Judge Ends Manslaughter Case Against N.B. Police Officers In Shooting

    Judge Ends Manslaughter Case Against N.B. Police Officers In Shooting
    Const. Patrick Bulger and Const. Mathieu Boudreau were charged in the death of 51-year-old Michel Vienneau, who was shot in his vehicle outside the Bathurst train station on Jan. 12, 2015.

    Judge Ends Manslaughter Case Against N.B. Police Officers In Shooting

    Six Men Face Charges After RCMP Foil Alleged Cape Breton Cocaine Conspiracy

    Six Men Face Charges After RCMP Foil Alleged Cape Breton Cocaine Conspiracy
    Mounties say six people face a total of 23 charges in the 18-month-long investigation, dubbed Operation Halfpenny.

    Six Men Face Charges After RCMP Foil Alleged Cape Breton Cocaine Conspiracy

    'They Knew He Was Dying' Parents Guilty Of 1st-Degree Murder In Son's Death

    'They Knew He Was Dying' Parents Guilty Of 1st-Degree Murder In Son's Death
    Justice Karen Horner said Emil Radita, 60, and Rodica Radita, 54, were equally guilty of murdering 15-year-old Alexandru.

    'They Knew He Was Dying' Parents Guilty Of 1st-Degree Murder In Son's Death

    Newfoundland Police Officer Acquitted In Contentious Sexual Assault Case

    Newfoundland Police Officer Acquitted In Contentious Sexual Assault Case
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A jury has acquitted a Newfoundland police officer of sexually assaulting an intoxicated woman he drove home from a bar while on duty.

    Newfoundland Police Officer Acquitted In Contentious Sexual Assault Case

    Man Dead After Campervan Goes Up In Flames In Surrey, B.C.

    Man Dead After Campervan Goes Up In Flames In Surrey, B.C.
    Mounties say the victim, a 55-year-old Surrey resident, was sleeping when the blaze began.

    Man Dead After Campervan Goes Up In Flames In Surrey, B.C.