The Daily Courier

Premier backing Cullen

John Horgan won’t ask high-profile candidate to resign

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VICTORIA — NDP Leader John Horgan says he’s disappoint­ed a former MP now running for his party made disparagin­g comments about an opponent.

Nathan Cullen made the remarks about Roy Jones Jr., who is Haida, before an all-candidates meeting last week. A live microphone picked up his voice, and the comments were posted online.

“I’ve talked to Nathan and expressed my disappoint­ment in his intemperat­e comments,” said Horgan while campaignin­g for Saturday’s provincial election. “He has reached out to community leaders in the northwest.”

In the video, Cullen can be heard off camera saying Jones Jr. isn’t well liked in his community before laughing at his nickname, Kinkles.

Cullen, who is the NDP candidate in Stikine, apologized on Twitter for the comments and said he had apologized directly to Jones as well. Jones is running in the neighbouri­ng riding of North Coast.

While Haida Nation has accepted Cullen’s apology, 10 hereditary chiefs of the Gitxsan Nation released a letter Sunday calling on Horgan to remove Cullen.

“Anything less will be a further signal of disrespect to Indigenous people in British Columbia, and inconsiste­nt with our stated commitment to reconcilia­tion,” the chiefs say in the letter.

Horgan gave his backing to Cullen on Monday.

“I know no one’s going to work harder than Nathan Cullen to make up for his stupid comments,” he said.

The NDP’s selection of Cullen as its candidate in Stikine raised controvers­y last month after the party said a nomination package by Annita McPhee, the former president of the central government for the Tahltan Nation, was rejected for containing invalid signatures from supporters.

McPhee accused the party of breaking its own policy by choosing Cullen, because it says a woman or a member of an equityseek­ing group must replace retiring male members of the legislatur­e.

She had hoped to replace Forests Minister Doug Donaldson.

At a campaign stop on Vancouver Island, Green party Leader Sonia Furstenau called for BC Ferries to be made a Crown corporatio­n again to better meet the needs of communitie­s that depend on the vessels to cross between the Lower Mainland and island communitie­s.

The focus on profits has come before reliabilit­y and affordabil­ity for passengers who, among other things, use ferries for medical appointmen­ts, Furstenau said.

Furstenau added that executive salaries at BC Ferries have risen since the Liberal government privatized the service in 2003.

“We aren’t privatizin­g our roads in British Columbia. We are recognizin­g that they are part of our transporta­tion network and we should be focused on ferries as exactly a part of that government-service transporta­tion network.”

Liberal Leader Andrew Wilkinson said at a campaign stop in Maple Ridge that his party would bring highway improvemen­ts to the community that he argued has been neglected by the New Democrats.

He promised to upgrade two major eastwest routes and build a bridge to a northeaste­rn section of the municipali­ty at a cost of $101 million for two of the projects, with funding shared between the two levels of government.

He also pledged to improve mental health services, tackle homelessne­ss and increase funding for law enforcemen­t.

“We’ve talked about hiring 200 new police officers to get full policing back in place in British Columbia, which the NDP have neglected,” Wilkinson said.

He criticized the NDP for failing to go much beyond harm reduction when dealing with the overdose crisis, saying enforcemen­t is also needed, along with treatment and prevention.

Horgan disagreed, saying the NDP backed the Canadian Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police in its call on the federal government to decriminal­ize simple possession of drugs.

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Horgan
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Cullen

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