Lethbridge Herald

Singh, Bloc continue to battle in Parliament

HAND GESTURE WAS DISMISSIVE OF RACIALIZED COMMUNITIE­S, SAYS NDP LEADER

- Teresa Wright THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says he believes the gesture a Bloc Quebecois MP made toward him wasn’t aimed at him personally, but dismissed the lives of Indigenous and Black people who have been victimized by police.

Singh says Bloc MP Alain Therrien made a brushing-off hand gesture after refusing the necessary unanimous consent for a motion he wanted to present

Wednesday on systemic racism in the RCMP — a movement Singh described as “dismissive” and “the face of racism.”

The exchange was not captured on House of Commons cameras Wednesday; Singh described the gesture in a news conference afterward.

“That gesture represents what racism is: that people don’t matter, that their lives don’t matter,” Singh said in an interview Thursday.

“It was symbolic of what we’re up against when we’re trying to challenge systemic racism ... Policing that has caused violence and death to Indigenous and Black people needs to stop and that’s why that gesture to me represente­d exactly what Indigenous, Black and racialized people feel every day — that they do not matter.”

Singh’s accusation that Therrien is a racist boiled over into a second day of tense exchanges in Ottawa Thursday as Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet defended his MP and called the charge “stupefying” and misguided.

He also suggested he felt Singh’s remarks were aimed more broadly at his party, and he called for Singh to apologize for painting his party as discrimina­tory. He said the Bloc Quebecois had been fielding accusation­s of racism on social media since Wednesday afternoon.

“Mr. Singh is a good person, I always thought that and I still think that. He somehow dropped the ball and I hope he will take it back,” Blanchet said.

House of Commons Speaker Anthony Rota had barred Singh from returning to the chamber Wednesday after the NDP refused to apologize.

When Singh stood to ask questions during a meeting of the special COVID-19 committee in the Commons chamber Thursday, Bloc MP Claude DeBellefeu­ille objected, asking Rota not to allow Singh to be recognized and speak because he still had not apologized.

Rota said he would take time to consider this, but allowed Singh to ask his questions, as the expulsion happened while the House of Commons was sitting normally on Wednesday, not as a special committee, and therefore operates under different rules.

At this, the three Bloc MPs who were present in the House of Commons got up and left the chamber as Singh began to speak.

Singh now says he never meant to bring political parties into the debate, but rather was speaking about what he called a “racist” act by one individual Bloc MP.

If there are political parties to blame, Singh placed that responsibi­lity on the two parties that have been in power in Canada for the last 153 years.

“Systems can only be created by parties that are in power and as far as I know there are only two parties that have ever been in power in Canada and that’s Conservati­ves and Liberals,” he said.

“They built the systems that we’ve identified have systemic racism.”

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