Times Colonist

Premiers differ on ‘systemic’ racism: PM

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OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says a first ministers’ declaratio­n condemning racism didn’t mention systemic discrimina­tion because not all the premiers would agree.

The statement released Thursday says firmly that all 14 first ministers oppose racism and will drive the government­s they lead to fight it.

“Recognizin­g that one of the strengths of Canada is its diversity, first ministers condemn all forms of racism, discrimina­tion, intoleranc­e, and bigotry,” it says in part.

“First ministers are determined to combat it — including anti-Black, anti-Indigenous, and anti-Asian racism and hate, as well as anti-Semitism and Islamophob­ia. Hate has no place in Canada and will not be tolerated.”

But the statement doesn’t talk about more subtle forms of discrimina­tion, in which members of some groups are denied opportunit­ies because of the way systems or programs are designed, without overt expression­s of bigotry.

“There was not consensus on using the phrase ‘systemic discrimina­tion’ or ‘systemic racism,’ ” Trudeau said Friday. “I have been crystal clear that the federal government recognizes it in order to be able to better address it.”

Trudeau wouldn’t say which premiers weren’t on board.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford said Friday that he was.

“First of all, I agree, there is systemic racism,” he said in his own news conference.

“I guess the biggest concern about the letter, with all the premiers, is a letter is one thing. We all acknowledg­e it, and I think we’ve all acknowledg­ed it in our own provinces, and three to four weeks later we’re putting this letter out. We want action, and I know the prime minister wants action, too, but all the premiers are saying, ‘Enough of the talking. Let’s start getting action.’ ”

Talk is cheap, he said, and it’s time to do things about racism.

Public officials such as RCMP Commission­er Brenda Lucki and Quebec Premier Francois Legault have said publicly that they want to root out racism but have rejected the idea that there are discrimina­tory features inherent to their institutio­ns.

Lucki later reversed herself with a written statement that there is indeed systemic discrimina­tion in the Mounties, though she has had difficulty citing examples.

The national inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls offered several instances in its purview a year ago, including the force’s poor data on Indigenous homicide victims, gaps in dispatchin­g in remote areas, a lack of cultural awareness among officers assigned to Inuit communitie­s and numerous instances of Indigenous women’s reports of crimes not being taken seriously.

Legault, though he set up an anti-racism task force for Quebec earlier this month, has stuck to acknowledg­ing that there are racists in Quebec but no deeper racist structures.

“My definition of systemic racism is that there’s a system in Quebec of racism and I don’t think there’s a system,” he said at the announceme­nt of the task force.

Trudeau said he thinks the gap in the first ministers’ statement indicates how much work needs to be done to fight systemic racism.

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau puts on a mask at Big Rig Brewery in Ottawa. The brewery was chosen as the setting for his Friday news conference to highlight its use of the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy and its production of hand sanitizer.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau puts on a mask at Big Rig Brewery in Ottawa. The brewery was chosen as the setting for his Friday news conference to highlight its use of the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy and its production of hand sanitizer.

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