Times Colonist

McKenna’s ‘climate Barbie’ faceoff with reporter generates strong reaction

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MONTREAL — There was no shortage of reaction from social media users on Saturday to Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna’s decision to call out a conservati­ve site that had repeatedly referred to her as “climate Barbie.”

McKenna received hundreds of messages of support from citizens and fellow politician­s after she pushed reporter Christophe­r Wilson during a news conference for a commitment that The Rebel will stop using the term in its articles and on social media.

Liberal MP Seamus O’Regan and NDP MP Nathan Cullen were among several politician­s who congratula­ted McKenna on Saturday for taking a stand against what Cullen called misogynist­ic language.

“Good on mckenna for staring down misogynist­ic Rebel media,” Cullen wrote on his Twitter attack. “Words matter & cheap, sexist attacks 2b challenged.”

Paul Dewar, the former NDP MP who lost his seat to McKenna in the last election, also tweeted support for his former rival and criticized those who use “demeaning language.”

The exchange occurred as Wilson asked McKenna a question about hydroelect­ricity at a news conference in Vancouver on Friday.

“So you’re the Rebel Media that happens to call me ‘climate Barbie.’ I certainly hope that you will no longer use that hashtag,” McKenna said.

Wilson eventually replied that he would not personally use the name, but said he did not have editorial control over others.

The exchange drew a flood of Twitter messages, many from people thanking McKenna for having the courage to stand up to sexist language.

“Bravo @cathmckenn­a for calling out the misogyny. Keep doing it for you, your girls, and all of us. Sincere thanks. #braveandst­rong,” wrote one Twitter user.

But not all the response on social media supported McKenna.

Some, including The Rebel founder Ezra Levant, took to Twitter to defend the use of the nickname and continued to use it repeatedly.

“Appointed to fill a gender quota; unable to control her emotions when criticized; spends taxes on vanity photo shoots. #ClimateBar­bie fits,” Levant wrote on Saturday.

Some of the critics accused McKenna of using derogatory language herself by describing those who doubt climate change as “deniers” — a word commonly used to describe those who doubt the Holocaust.

Wilson, who had initially told McKenna he wouldn’t personally use the Barbie nickname any more, appeared to have reconsider­ed when he took to Twitter after the exchange.

“Our Alberta bureau chief coined the phrase ‘Climate Barbie,’ a reference to McKenna’s shallownes­s. She did not disprove that tonight,” he wrote in a Twitter post on Friday.

 ??  ?? Federal Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna addresses a news conference on Friday in Vancouver, where she urged Rebel reporter Christophe­r Wilson to stop using the term “Climate Barbie.”
Federal Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna addresses a news conference on Friday in Vancouver, where she urged Rebel reporter Christophe­r Wilson to stop using the term “Climate Barbie.”

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