Concerns over pre-election polarization amid online barbs in B.C. - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:26 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Concerns over pre-election polarization amid online barbs in B.C.

The B.C. New Democratsand B.C. Conservative Partyare trading increasingly sharp attacks on social issues that some believe are akin to U.S.-style culture wars.

B.C. Green MLA says polarizationonly servesto distract from major issues facing British Columbians

A composite of two men in suits.
B.C. Premier David Eby has attacked the B.C. Conservatives over abortion, race and gender identity. B.C. Conservative Leader John Rustad has been critical of Eby and the 'radical NDP.' (Justine Boulin, Ethan Cairns/CBC)

The B.C. New Democratsand B.C. Conservative Partyare trading increasingly sharp attacks on social issues that some believe are akin to U.S.-style culture wars.

Premier David Ebyhas attacked the B.C. Conservatives over abortion, race and gender identity, whilethe Conservatives have beencritical of Eby and the "radical NDP,"claiming the government is trying to distract from its own failed policieson public safety and affordability.

A B.C. Green MLA, meanwhile, says the attacks divert attention from complex issues affecting the lives of British Columbians.

Eby held a press conference in Victoria on Tuesday to tout the NDP's progress on women's reproductive issues, including free birth control and in-vitrofertilization funding.

Even though the B.C. Conservatives haven't mentioned abortion in their platform, Eby accused party leader John Rustad of trying to erode those rights.

"It's fairly safe to say that if he is, at best, ambivalent about reproductive freedom and, at worst, hostile to it, that women's access to abortion, that women's access to free birth control is on the ballot this election, just like it is in the United States," Eby said Tuesday.

Rustad declined to speak with CBC News, but wrote on social media that "under a B.C. Conservative government, access to abortion, contraception and other items will remain exactly as it is now."

NDP accuses some Conservatives of 'hateful agenda'

Eby has accused the B.C.Conservatives of welcoming candidates who are anti-abortion and have offensive views on the 2SLGBTQ+community and Indigenous people.

"The candidates put forward by the B.C. Conservatives are advancing a hateful agenda," he said.

Bryan Breguet, the Conservativecandidate for Vancouver-Langara, is one candidate that is facing scrutiny for social media activity.

"Indigenous people having a higher incarceration rate doesn't necessarily mean there are systemic biases against them in the justice system.They could just, you know, commit more crimes. Like Black people in the US," he wrote in a social media post from 2020.

Breguet said he was not able to do an interview with CBC News.

However, he explained himself in a video posted to social mediawhere he spokewith Conservative candidate forNorth Coast-Haida GwaiiChris Sankey, who is Indigenous and says he is from the Tsimshian community.

"This tweet is, like, four years old ... my intention wasn't to be racist or offensive," Breguet said in the video, adding thatthe"woke left" doesn't care about the underlying issues affecting Black and Indigenouspeople.

A sign at a Vancouver polling station directs voters to the ballot box during the 2022 civic elections.
Some Conservative candidates are being accused of having discriminatory views which one candidate says is being treated as a wedge issue. (Justine Boulin/CBC)

Another B.C. Conservative candidate, Tim Thielmann in the Victoria-Beacon Hill riding,hasbeen accused of a bigoted attack on racialized NDP MLAs.

Thielmann criticized the NDP's equity mandate, whichstates that when a male MLA retires, he has to be replaced by a member of an equity-seeking group, such as a woman or an Indigenous person.

"Unlike the NDP, our candidates secure their nominations on the basis of their individual merits, not their skin colour or identity markers," Thielmann said in a social media post.

NDP MLA Aman Singh says the comments arean example of Trump-style politics meant to divide people.

Thielmann argues the NDP is exploiting a wedge issue to distract from its poor record on affordability and public safety

"If you point out that they have a policy that promotes people based on sex and race and other group identity markers, then they call you a racist," he said.

Polarization a growing concern, says B.C. Green MLA

In a statement announcing B.C. United Leader Kevin Falcon's decision to suspendhis party's election campaign and throwhis support behind the Conservatives, Rustad said the two had a shared goal of "defeating David Eby and the radical NDP."

Adam Olsen,the B.C. Green MLA for Saanich North and the Islands,says he's concerned by the increasingly polarized political discourse between the B.C. NDP and the B.C. Conservatives that triesto paint their opponentas being on the extreme end of the political spectrum.

A bald Indigenous man with a white goatee wearing a grey jacket smiles while standing in front of a mic.
B.C. Green Party MLA for Saanich North and the Islands Adam Olsen says the B.C. NDP and the B.C. Conservatives are trying to paint each other as being on the extreme end of the political spectrum. (Chad Hipolito/The Canadian Press)

"I would in no way characterize the B.C. NDP as radical left or as socialist, just by their pure definition," Olsen said. "But that is the narrative that's coming up from the United States and the desire to really create this dramatic distinction between the left and the right."

Olsen says such polarizationonly servesto distract from major issues facing British Columbians, such ashealth care and housing, that require complex solutions.

"I think that what they've always been trying to do is create a binary in this province," he said of the NDP and Conservatives.

"I think thatthe oversimplification of complexity is a really dangerous thing."

With files from Katie DeRosa and The Canadian Press