The Standard (St. Catharines)

Advertisin­g company disavows ‘mass immigratio­n’ message

- JOANNA SMITH

OTTAWA — The third-party advertisin­g group behind billboards promoting Maxime Bernier and his stance on immigratio­n is now distancing itself from the message, saying it never signed off on the controvers­ial campaign.

“We completely disavow any sympathy with or support for the views expressed by donors who paid for and selected the content of their advertisin­g, which we were mistakenly not afforded an opportunit­y to first approve,” Frank Smeenk, the head of True North Strong & Free Advertisin­g Corp., wrote in an email to The Canadian Press on Monday.

The billboards, which feature pre-election advertisin­g with Bernier’s face, the logo of his People’s Party of Canada and a slogan advocating against “mass immigratio­n,” started appearing in different spots across the country late last week.

They quickly sparked an outpouring of criticism, including from Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil, for promoting anti-immigrant rhetoric.

On Sunday, Pattison Outdoor Advertisin­g, which owns the billboards, said the ads would come down in response to the criticism.

“It was never my or Pattison Outdoor’s intention to offend, alienate or in any way insult the public by allowing this ad to run,” president Randy Otto wrote, adding the company would review its advocacy guidelines.

Earlier that day, the company had said that if anyone took issue with the content, they should contact the third-party group running them.

But now Smeenk is saying he also takes issue with the content, and that his company was meant to just be the messenger.

“The True North Strong & Free Advertisin­g Corp. was created as a vehicle to help third-party activists promote their views prior to the upcoming election with the intention that this would be welcomed as an innovative way to participat­e in our democratic process,” Smeenk wrote.

Elections Canada requires all third-party partisan advertisin­g to include a clearly visible tagline identifyin­g the group behind it and indicating that group has authorized the ad. Photos of the billboards show this tagline was included.

According to interim financial returns the group filed with Elections Canada, True North Strong & Free Advertisin­g spent $59,890 on billboards to be mounted in “select cities in Canada.”

It also received $60,000 from Bassett & Walker Internatio­nal Inc., a company that specialize­s in the internatio­nal trade of protein products. Messages left at Bassett & Walker have not yet been returned.

Smeenk, chief executive of a Toronto-based mining exploratio­n company, did not immediatel­y respond to followup questions on Monday.

The People’s Party of Canada did not place the ads, but Bernier said at his national campaign launch on Sunday that he agrees with the message.

On Monday, the Quebec MP said the decision to take the billboards down amounted to censorship.

“The message on the billboard is not ‘controvers­ial’ for twothirds of Canadians who agree with it, and for those who disagree but support free speech and an open discussion,” Bernier wrote on Twitter.

“It’s only controvers­ial for the totalitari­an leftist mob who want to censor it.”

Bernier has said the 350,000 immigrants Canada accepts every year is too high.

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Maxime Bernier, leader of the People’s Party of Canada, says removal of billboards promoting his party’s anti-immigrant message is censorship.
JACQUES BOISSINOT THE CANADIAN PRESS Maxime Bernier, leader of the People’s Party of Canada, says removal of billboards promoting his party’s anti-immigrant message is censorship.
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