U of T cancels rally by white nationalist group
OTTAWA • A pledge by Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer to yank federal funding from universities that fail to uphold free speech wouldn’t apply to a decision by the University of Toronto to ban a nationalist rally from campus, his spokesman said Wednesday.
“No,” was Jake Enwright’s answer when asked whether the university’s move would risk its federal funding under a Scheer government.
While Enwright could not articulate exactly why the decision to bar the Canadian Nationalist Party event didn’t meet the threshold, he said Scheer will be working with universities to prevent loopholes for events that risk violating Canadian law.
“Mr. Scheer is committed to working with the universities to ensure that any policy he brings forward does not become a platform for hate speech,” Enwright said.
Scheer made the promise during his campaign for the leadership of the Conservatives, linking it to a number of instances where pro-life and pro-Israel events were turned away from campuses.
“The foundation of our democracy is the ability to have a debate about any subject,” Scheer said during his leadership victory speech in May, to raucous cheering and applause. “That is why I am so committed to defending free speech. I will withhold federal funding from universities that shut down debate and can’t stand different points of view.”
Scheer hadn’t yet articulated how the policy would work, in part because of another platform commitment — letting Conservative grassroots shape the party’s policy at next year’s convention.
But the decision Wednesday by the University of Toronto to reject the Canadian Nationalist Party event has put the idea to an early test.
The nationalist group’s 21-point platform includes a claim that the founding peoples of Canada — which it describes as being of European descent — are being suppressed.
It also calls for amending the charter, “characterizing ethnic nationalism and removing its stance of multiculturalism,” and for “citizenship requirements be returned to founding criteria, resulting in the immediate deportation of citizenshipholding convicted terrorists .”
The group is planning an event for mid-September to discuss the nationalist movement, and had said on its Facebook page that it would be held at the university.
But university president Meric Gertler said bigotry, hate and violence have no place on campus, condemning the deadly clash between protesters and white supremacists in Virginia over the weekend that left one woman dead and 19 injured.
The group’s leader, Travis Patron, said in a video posted Wednesday they are not a white supremacist movement. Patron also said the event will be held elsewhere.
In developing his policy, Scheer also cited University of Toronto professor Jordan Peterson, who was the target of on-campus criticism for his refusal to use genderneutral pronouns, and who has become a hero of the free speech movement.
Peterson had been scheduled to participate at an event next week at Ryerson University about the stifling of free speech on campus. On Wednesday, the university cancelled the event, citing safety concerns.
Enwright said he was unfamiliar with the incident and was unable to say whether Scheer’s policy would apply in that instance.
Among the other speakers scheduled for that event was Faith Goldy, whose coverage of the Virginia events for conservative news outlet The Rebel prompted one of the site’s co-founders to quit and two commentators to resign.
Goldy and the outlet were pilloried for appearing to sympathize with Richard Spencer, whose manifesto for the Charlottesville event considers Jews as distinct from other Europeans, and calls for the creation of racially and ethnically defined states.