Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Canada polls: Indian-origin candidates mired in scandals

- Anirudh Bhattachar­yya letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

TORONTO: The nastiness that often character is es an election in India appears to have seeped into the campaign to form the government in Canada’s largest province, as a couple of controvers­ies surroundin­g In do-Canadian candidates be having badly have taken centrestag­e.

The scandals plaguing the election process in Ontario are emerging from one prominent riding (as constituen­cies are called in Canada) – Brampton East, in a township in the suburbs of Toronto. Among the high-profile candidates here is Gurratan Singh, brother of J ag meet Singh, the federal leader of the New Democratic Party (NDP).

G ur rat an made an appearance on the front page of the Toronto Sun, for all the wrong reasons. It was a photograph of his from 2006, participat­ing in a demonstrat­ion while holding a sign reading “F**k the Police”.

As his party faced serious blow back, he issued a pubic apology, stating it was something he was “now deeply ashamed of”.

His brother le apt to G ur ra tan’ s defence :“It’ s something that happened 12 years ago. My brother’ s absolutely embarrasse­d by that, (he has) apologised unequivoca­lly.” While most candidates would have been dismissed for such a transgress­ion, provincial party leader Andrea Horwath has retained Gurratan.

Elections in Ontario matter in Canada in the way that results in Uttar Pradesh do in India. As the NDP loses traction over this controvers­y, earlier it was the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves that suf- fe red from another scandal out of Brampton East.

That involved Simmer Sandhu, the party’s then candidate. He had to step aside after his former employer, 407 Express Toll Route, complained there had been “internal theft of customer data”. That data may have been used for the party’s nomination contests, across several ridings and is now the subject of a police investigat­ion. Sand huh as maintained his innocence, calling the allegation­s “totally baseless”.

J ag dish Grew al, publisher and editor of Ontario’s sole Punjabi language newspaper, Punjabi Post, said this scandal had“major a ripple effect” across the province in impacting the PC Party’s prospects. Similarly, he felt, the G ur rat an Sing hp ho to could have an“effect” on the overall chances of the NDP.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India