The Prince George Citizen

Parties throw same-sex marriage barbs

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The federal Liberals hinted on Thursday at some of the notes they will look to strike in the fall campaign to win over young and progressiv­e-minded voters when they circulated a video of Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer speaking out against samesex marriage early in his career as an MP.

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale tweeted a short, edited video of an April 2005 speech Scheer gave in the House of Commons explaining his opposition to the Civil Marriage Act, which legalized samesex marriage in Canada later that year.

Along with the video came a challenge to march in Sunday’s Ottawa Pride parade, noting Scheer has never done so.

The parade has taken on some additional significan­ce this year after Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson days ago came out as openly gay after decades in public life.

“There is nothing more important to society than the raising of children, for its very survival requires it,” Scheer said in his speech, delivered about a year after he was elected as the Conservati­ve MP for the Saskatchew­an riding of Regina-Qu’Appelle for the first time.

“Homosexual unions are by nature contradict­ory to this,” he said.

“There is no complement­arity of the sexes. Two members of the same sex may use their God-given free will to engage in acts, to co-habit and to own property together. They may commit themselves to monogamy. They may pledge to remain in a loving relationsh­ip for life,” he said. “In that sense they have many of the collateral features of marriage, but they do not have its inherent feature, as they cannot commit to the natural procreatio­n of children. They cannot therefore be married.”

The majority of Conservati­ve MPs voted against the bill, as did a number of Liberal MPs. Some remain in caucus.

Brock Harrison, director of communicat­ions for Scheer, said the Conservati­ve leader has no plans to change same-sex marriage laws.

“Mr. Scheer supports same-sex marriage as defined in law and as prime minister will, of course, uphold it,” Harrison tweeted Thursday. “This is yet another desperatio­n tactic from Trudeau on the eve of an election to distract from his record of failure and incompeten­ce.”

Scheer has softened his stance on samesex marriage since the debates over the Civil Marriage Act.

He supported a move to erase the traditiona­l definition of marriage from the Conservati­ve Party of Canada’s policy book at its 2016 convention, arguing Canadians already had their say in two elections where same-sex marriage was a major issue, and that it had been legal for more than a decade.

Still, the Conservati­ves said earlier this year he would not take part in any Pride events, and he has dodged questions about his personal beliefs.

“People have personal views on things,” he said in a 2016 interview with CBC.

“I voted my conscience. I voted my constituen­ts’ wishes. It’s not something that I’m looking to revisit or to reopen.”

Goodale said Thursday that promising not to reverse legislatio­n on same-sex marriage does not go far enough.

“The unfortunat­e reality is that too many Canadians still face discrimina­tion, hate and violence because of their sexual orientatio­n,” Goodale said in a statement. “Canadians expect action, not words alone.”

Goodale, who was not available for comment, voted in favour of legalizing same-sex marriage in 2005. But he did vote against a private member’s motion calling for the recognitio­n of same-sex spouses in 1995.

In 1999, Goodale voted in favour of a motion saying it was necessary to state that marriage should remain between one man and one woman, and that Parliament should do what it could to protect it.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh stepped into the fray to say Scheer’s comments are why his party would not support the Conservati­ves should they win a minority government in the Oct. 21 vote.

“We can’t trust Mr. Scheer or his caucus to champion the fundamenta­l rights of Canadians,” he said in a statement.

Jonathan Rose, an associate professor of Canadian politics at Queen’s University, said the video is setting the stage for the campaign to come.

“All parties need to is sow the seeds of doubt,” he said.

“This won’t cause anyone to change their mind, probably, but over time, the slow, steady, drip, drip, drip of these kinds of allegation­s from now right to election day may have people change their minds,” he said. “It’s the first salvo in a long, ongoing war.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer, seen arriving Tuesday at a child-care facility in Toronto, spoke out against same-sex marriage as MPs were debating whether to legalize it nearly 15 years ago, and the Liberals are reminding everyone about it while pressuring him to attend the Ottawa Pride parade.
CP PHOTO Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer, seen arriving Tuesday at a child-care facility in Toronto, spoke out against same-sex marriage as MPs were debating whether to legalize it nearly 15 years ago, and the Liberals are reminding everyone about it while pressuring him to attend the Ottawa Pride parade.

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