Kenney aide condemned for ‘illegal ideas’
• Jason Kenney’s speech writer has found himself embroiled in controversy over an article written in 2013 that declared Canada’s residential schools a “bogus genocide story.”
Paul Bunner, who was also Stephen Harper’s speech writer between 2006 and 2009, wrote that the media, politicians and others need to question the “residential schools orthodoxy” and recognize those who created and operated the schools were “motivated by an altruistic desire to help a colonization-shattered people adapt to their new reality.” The column was for the publication C2C Journal.
In it, Bunner argued “the best that can be said” of the historic 2008 apology that Harper delivered for the residential school system was “a strategic attempt to kill the story and move on to a better relationship between Natives and Non-natives.”
“Unfortunately, it only appears to have deepened the conviction that Church and State conspired not only to ‘ kill the Indian in the child,’ but also to physically exterminate the whole race. The Aboriginal grievance and entitlement narrative continues to gather momentum," Bunner wrote.
On Thursday, NDP leader and former premier Rachel Notley gave a press conference before Question Period, calling Bunner’s statements “hateful” and described them as “illegal ideas.” She demanded Kenney fire him.
“It is painful to read something as profoundly racist as the article Paul Bunner wrote,” said Notley. “It is disturbing to think how many of the premier’s public statements ... have been composed by someone who harbours such hatred against Indigenous people.”
Kenney, asked about the controversy at an unrelated press conference, did not comment on whether or not he would fire Bunner. He said he has not read the article and was unaware of Bunner’s statements when he was hired. Kenney did say he has seen some quotes from it. “I fundamentally disagree with those statements,” Kenney said.
Harper, in delivering the apology 12 years ago, called it a “sad chapter” in Canadian history.
“The Government of Canada sincerely apologizes and asks the forgiveness of the Aboriginal peoples of this country for failing them so profoundly,” he said.
Between 1831 and 1996, 139 residential schools were operated across Canada, and some 150,000 Indigenous children attended; some 6,000 died.
The column’s existence was first noted by writer Robert Jago, says a 2015 story in APTN News on the controversy. At the time, Bunner stood by the column, noting it was written after he’d left Harper’s office, and that he was not the author of Harper’s apology speech. On Thursday, CBC News in Alberta reported on the column’s existence.
Bunner didn’t immediately respond to the National Post’s request for comment on Thursday.