The Hamilton Spectator

Scheer calls minister to apologize

Conservati­ve leader apologized after Tory MP called Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna ‘climate Barbie’

- MIA RABSON

Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer has personally apologized to Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna for a Tory MP’s remark referring to her as “climate Barbie.”

Scheer called McKenna, a Hamilton native, on Thursday to offer the apology two days after Saskatchew­an MP Gerry Ritz posted the insult on Twitter.

The tweet, condemned as sexist by politician­s of all stripes, appeared inspired by the far-right website The Rebel, which used the “climate Barbie” term in dozens of stories since McKenna became environmen­t minister in 2015.

McKenna, who is in New York for Climate Week NYC, said she is fed up with having to respond to sexist insults that take away from the work she is doing.

A spokeswoma­n for McKenna says the minister accepted the apology and told Scheer she hopes to see “a shift in behaviour and attitudes in politics.”

After a social media backlash, Ritz deleted the tweet and apologized on Twitter, but has not yet spoken to McKenna.

The Ritz incident and an ongoing issue with Conservati­ve Sen. Lynn Beyak’s comments about First Nations, served as a distractio­n for the Conservati­ves in a week where the focus was supposed to be on proposed Liberal tax changes.

The Conservati­ves removed Beyak from her three Senate committee positions on Thursday, though she remains a member of the Conservati­ve caucus.

She is in hot water for the second time this year over comments about Indigenous People. In the spring she said residentia­l schools did a lot of good and most recently she advised First Nations people to tear up their status cards and practise their culture on “their own dime.”

Conservati­ve Senate leader Larry Smith issued a statement on his website saying Beyak had been issued “a set of measures to guide” her but he didn’t elaborate and says he considers the matter now closed.

Conservati­ve strategist Tim Powers, vicepresid­ent of Summa Strategies, said Scheer is doing the right things, but he’s taking too long to do them.

“In this day and age, when an obvious mistake has been made, you don’t have the luxury to ponder it,” said Powers. “I think he’s got to look at this and his team has to look at this as a learning moment.”

Powers said Scheer may have been struggling with what to do in both instances because he places a high priority on free speech.

One of his campaign promises during the Conservati­ve leadership race was a threat to cut federal funding for any university that denies certain groups the right to be heard on campus. He pointed to some universiti­es where anti-abortion rallies were cancelled after other students objected.

Powers said Scheer has to come to terms with what is freedom of speech in a difference of opinion about sensitive issues and what is “torqued, offensive political rhetoric.”

“If you’re trying to stretch it, you can make a free speech argument, but it’s the free speech of the 1940s and 1950s not 2017,” he said. “I think it’s important for Andrew to find some resolution to this quickly.”

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