Jagmeet Singh verbally harassed during Ontario election campaign stop in Peterborough - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:15 AM | Calgary | -13.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Jagmeet Singh verbally harassed during Ontario election campaign stop in Peterborough

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says the aggressive verbal harassment he endured outside a campaign event in Peterborough, Ont. was one of the most troubling experiences of his political career.

Singh says politicians stoking division must take responsibility for growing hostility

Insults, threats hurled at Jagmeet Singh during campaign stop

2 years ago
Duration 2:00
Police in Peterborough, Ont., are investigating an incident that saw NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh accosted by protesters at a provincial campaign stop. Singh says it was one of the worst experiences of his political career.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says the aggressive verbal harassment he endured outside a campaign event in Peterborough, Ont. was one of the most troubling experiences of his political career.

Singh was accosted Tuesday by protesters before and after a rally at the campaign office of provincial NDP candidate Jen Deck.

Videos posted to social media show protesters approaching Singh and shouting profanityin his face as he left the event. Some followed Singh to his vehicle, where they continued to yell and hold up middle fingers just outside the passenger-side window.

Protesters could be heard shouting, "You're a f--king piece of s--t" and"You lying piece of s--t" on videos capturingthe incident.

Video posted to social media show protesters shouting at Singh and following him to a vehicle after a campaign event in Peterborough, Ont. on Tuesday. (Freedom Through Unity - Peterborough/Kawartha/Facebook)

A day later in Ottawa, Singh said the incident reflects a worsening trend of aggression and polarization in Canadian politics.

"There were folks that were saying some really horrible things. Some folks were saying 'I hope you die' and things of that nature," he told a news conference when asked about the incident.

"We should be able to disagree as a society respectfully, maybe even angrily, but it doesn't have to come to the point where it's getting so polarized that people's safety is at risk."

Singh said he has gotten used to dealing with aggressive behaviour in public, but conceded that the verbal abuse he received in Peterborough "would rank among the worst experiences."

Mounties surround Justin Trudeau as he boards a campaign bus.
Members of an RCMP security detail put their hands up to protect Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau from rocks as protesters shout and throw gravel following a campaign stop in London Ont., on Monday, September 6, 2021. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

He directed some blame at politicians who stoke division, though he did not offer any names.

"There is a responsibility that politicians play who purposely flame these divisions or purposefully spread misinformation," Singh added.

Peterborough police say they have reached out to Singh since there was no call for service made after the incident.

"It's disheartening to hear as we know most residents are respectful & these few are not reflective of our community," the police servicewrote on Twitter.

Threats against politicians more common now

The 2021 federal election campaign and this winter's truck convoy protest in Ottawa have highlighted what politicians and security agencies say is a growing trend of hostility toward political figures.

Signs and flags bearing the phrases "F--k Trudeau and "F--K Legault" were rampant throughout the Ottawa region for much of the protest.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was dogged by protesters for much of last year's campaign. At a campaign stop in London, Ont.,he was pelted with gravel.

A 2020 report by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service obtained by CBC News through an access to information request found that "political figures in Canada are facing threats of violence and online abuse with increasing regularity."

The document notes an increasing number of online threats and calls for violence against Trudeau and says several provincial premiers have experienced similar threats.

Conservative politicians also have decried a shift in public discourse toward threatening and aggressive behaviour.

"Something has changedand it has not changed for the good," Conservative MP Michelle Rempel Garner told CBC News last year.

Conservative leadership candidate Scott Aitchisoncondemned the harassment directed at Singh.

"This vitriol is corrosive for our politics and bad for the country. Politics by intimidation has no place in Canada," Aitchisonsaid on Twitter.