Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Male MPs must help fight assault on Hill: Cullen

- KRISTY KIRKUP

Male MPs must help to usher in a culture change on Parliament Hill and combat sexual misconduct, says veteran NDP MP Nathan Cullen, who is looking to work with colleagues of all stripes to address inappropri­ate behaviour often viewed as a “public secret.”

Cullen said the “ecosystem” of people who interact in and around the corridors of power — including support staff, lobbyists and parliament­arians — can create a space where profession­al and personal environmen­ts blur and challenges are created.

“There’s long hours often away from home,” he said.

“There’s a clear work environmen­t but there’s also the receptions … and opportunit­ies where people either intentiona­lly do wrong or misunderst­and the relationsh­ips that exist. That’s what I have noticed.”

Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna — who has publicly pushed back over being called “Climate Barbie” online — said there are examples of harassment on the Hill and other workplaces that must be fought, adding that movements like #MeToo will be effective only with action.

“If we don’t take action on this, what example are we setting for the girls and boys?” McKenna said.

“I have two daughters. I have a son, too. Are we going to make it … better, safer, more equal for all of them?”

The Canadian Press conducted a survey last month of female MPs about their experience­s with sexual harassment and found more than half of respondent­s — 58 per cent — said they had personally been the target of one or more forms of sexual misconduct while in office, including inappropri­ate or unwanted remarks, gestures or text messages of a sexual nature.

Thirty-eight of 89 female MPs took part in the voluntary, anonymous survey.

Three MPs who responded said they had been victims of sexual assault, while four said they experience­d sexual harassment, defined in the survey as insistent and repeated sexual advances. Nearly half of respondent­s — 47 per cent — also said they were subjected to inappropri­ate comments on social media.

“It offends me, it troubles me, but doesn’t surprise me,” Cullen said. “I guess that is … a comment on the environmen­t we have allowed to exist. I don’t know how it compares to other work environmen­ts but Parliament should be an example of a safe place for people to be.”

Green party Leader Elizabeth May believes fixing the power imbalance on the Hill will demand male MPs speak up when they learn of unacceptab­le behaviour.

 ??  ?? Nathan Cullen
Nathan Cullen

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