Council candidate apologizes for taking opponent's pamphlet from door - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:31 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Council candidate apologizes for taking opponent's pamphlet from door

A man running for Ottawa city council is apologizing to another candidate for a "lapse in judgment" that was caught on a security camera and shared on social media.

David Hill says it was 'a lapse in judgement' to remove Taayo Simmonds' material

Barrhaven West city council candidate David Hill is seen here in a screenshot of a video moments before he grabs a campaign pamphlet for rival candidate Taayo Simmonds and drops it to the ground. Hill has apologized after Simmonds shared video footage of the incident online on Wednesday. (Supplied by Taayo Simmonds)

A man running for Ottawa city council is apologizing to another candidate for a "lapse in judgment" that was caught on camera.

David Hill issued the apology to fellow Barrhaven West candidate TaayoSimmonds late Wednesday afternoon, hours after Simmondsposted video footage of Hill on Facebook and Twitter and 12 days before voters go to the polls on Oct. 24.

The video, dated Sept. 21, shows Hill approaching the front door of a house, grabbing a Simmondscampaign pamphlet, dropping it to the ground and leaving some of his own campaign material behind.

Simmonds told CBCNews he wrestledwith whether to release the footage publicly afterreceiving it from the homeowner.

"My concern was that mycampaign or I would be just kind of associated with this incident," Simmonds said.

But what happened was wrong, he added.

"It's justdirty politics. But I think the bigger thing is we're putting our names forward to represent the community andso I just think to do that when you think nobody's looking but you're running for a very public job ...I just don't think it's a good look."

'A lapse in judgment'

CBC News reached out to Hill for comment late Wednesday afternoon.

Simmonds said he received a written apology from Hill at 4:48 p.m ET. Hill's campaign team also shared the apology with CBC News.

"I want to offer my sincere apology for my lapse in judgment," Hill wrote Simmonds. "I have always strived to ensure that my entire campaign team and I remain focused on the needs of the residents of Barrhaven and that we refrain from engaging in any form of personal attacks or disinformation and conduct ourselves with the utmost integrity.

"In this particular incident, I failed to live up to those standards, and I apologize unreservedly."

In a subsequent tweet, Hill extended his apology to the residents of Barrhaven West.

"The other day when I was canvassing, I removed and dropped to the ground my opponent's flyer. This was wrong," the tweet read.

'Change the tone at city hall'

Simmonds, a first-time council candidate, said it's the first complaint he's received about an incident like the one involving Hill, though he added he has had to deal with "an incredible amount" of vandalism andelection signtheft.

"When I did make the decision to run, I understood that these types of things can happen," Simmonds said. "This is part of the reason why I'm running is I want to change the tone at city hall where we don't have these types of headlines."

Taayo Simmonds is shown here with one of his campaign pamphlets. (Taayo Simmonds/Facebook)

Simmonds said he senta complaint about Hill to the city clerk on Friday.

Add some good to your morning and evening.

The bright spot in your inbox. Stay connected to the city you love with The Highlight, delivered monthly.

...

The next issue of The Highlight will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.