Calgary Herald

Kenney regrets ’80s views on gays

- DEAN BENNETT

EDMONTON Alberta’s United Conservati­ve leader says he regrets comments made in his earlier days about overturnin­g a law extending hospital visitation rights to gay couples during the 1980s AIDS epidemic in San Francisco.

Jason Kenney says, since then, his record in Parliament shows he supports domestic partner arrangemen­ts and benefits for couples regardless of sexual orientatio­n.

Kenney made the comments after a two-decade-old audio recording of him surfaced recently.

On the recording, Kenney touts his role in organizing a petition calling for a referendum to repeal the city ordinance extending recognitio­n rights of heterosexu­al couples, such as hospital visitation, to same-sex couples.

The ordinance was defeated by a narrow margin in a referendum.

“Sure, there are things that I’ve done and said in my life that I regret,” Kenney said Thursday at the legislatur­e.

“Is that (the San Francisco comments) one of them?” he was asked.

“Sure,” he replied. “I can tell you in 2003, and ’04 and ’05 you can look at the Hansard transcript and see me supporting domestic partner arrangemen­ts for dependent couples regardless of sexual orientatio­n.

“That has been my long-standing public view.”

Kenney and his United Conservati­ves have an uneasy relationsh­ip with Alberta’s gay community and have been denied permission to march in recent Pride parades.

The party is currently deliberati­ng the fate of high-profile party member John Carpay, who publicly compared the pride rainbow flag to the Nazi swastika.

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