Ottawa Citizen

Quebec byelection poster assailed as racist

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MONTREAL • A candidate in a Quebec provincial byelection has triggered controvers­y with a campaign poster that criticizes Canadian multicultu­ralism and shows a photo of a woman wearing a niqab.

Alexandre Cormier-Denis is running for the Parti indépendan­tiste in the Montreal riding of Gouin.

The poster has the slogan “Choose Your Quebec” above two photos of the same woman — one in which she is sporting a blue tuque with the Fleur-de-lis and the other in which she is wearing a niqab.

Below the photos it is written “Canadian Multicultu­ralism, No Thanks.”

Police withdrew the poster from outside a subway station after they received complaints but it was put back up outside another one because Cormier-Denis is a registered candidate in the May 29 vote.

Cormier-Denis says multicultu­ralism ghettoizes immigrants in their own communitie­s. “So while an election should be the time to give voters real choices, it is considered scandalous for a candidate to dare question the multicultu­ralist order that Ottawa imposes on Quebec,” he wrote on Twitter.

“The journalist­ic caste seems incapable of imagining it is possible to get out of this multicultu­ralist model without it being morally reprehensi­ble. Yet, by shutting them off in their communitie­s of origin, EnglishCan­adian multicultu­ralism is actually closer to real racism.”

Haroun Bouazzi, co-president of a Muslim and Arab group that is in favour of secularity, called the poster anti-Muslim and said he believes voters in Gouin will categorica­lly reject CormierDen­is next Monday.

“But if he gets five per cent it would be enormous, a disaster,” Bouazzi said in an interview. “But we’re urging people in Gouin to show that Quebec isn’t ready to import racist slogans and posters from France.”

 ?? PAUL CHIASSO / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A vandalized campaign poster shows two photos of the same woman, one in which she is sporting a tuque with the Fleur-de-lis, the other in which she wears a niqab.
PAUL CHIASSO / THE CANADIAN PRESS A vandalized campaign poster shows two photos of the same woman, one in which she is sporting a tuque with the Fleur-de-lis, the other in which she wears a niqab.

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