Wednesday, June 17, 2026
ADVT 
National

Horgan tries to clarify answer on white privilege

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Oct, 2020 05:48 PM
  • Horgan tries to clarify answer on white privilege

NDP Leader John Horgan is trying to clarify an answer he gave on white privilege during Tuesday night's leaders debate in the B.C. election.

In a statement issued on Twitter, Horgan says he wished he had given a different answer when the three party leaders were asked how they have reckoned with white privilege.

Horgan answered by sharing his experience playing lacrosse as a youth, saying he doesn't see colour.

Liberal Leader Andrew Wilkinson discussed his time working in rural B.C. as a doctor in Indigenous communities.

The Green party's Sonia Furstenau said she cannot comprehend that some mothers tell their children to be wary of the police.

But Horgan later revised his answer on Twitter, admitting it could have upset people.

"Saying 'I don’t see colour' causes pain and makes people feel unseen," he wrote. "I’m sorry. I’ll never fully understand, as a white person, the lived reality of systemic racism. I’m listening, learning, and I’ll keep working every day to do better."

At a campaign stop on Wednesday in Richmond, Horgan expanded on his Twitter comment.

“I was jolted out of my comfort last night and I’m going to reflect on that. I profoundly regret that I alienated and hurt people last night.”

The Coalition on Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women and Girls in BC has also sent a letter to the three party leaders expressing "grave concern" that safety of Indigenous people does not appear to be a priority for them.

The letter, signed by 18 people and groups including the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs, says none of the party platforms released so far offer plans to implement findings from the national inquiry into murdered and missing Indigenous women.

The New Democrat and Liberal parties have unveiled their platforms and Furstenau is slated to release her party's policies and goals at an event in New Westminster later in the day.

In her answer on Tuesday night, Furstenau pledged to work to end systemic racism but admitted neither she nor the other two party leaders, who are all white, could ever grasp its nuances.

The letter from the coalition says the COVID-19 pandemic shows all levels of government can act quickly when failing to do so can be life-threatening.

"The negligence of government and its failure to act swiftly to implement the (findings) betrays a lack of value for the lives of Indigenous women," the letter says.

The letter urges each party to immediately release its plan to act on the findings and to respond to recommendations from the committee about how the plan will be implemented and funded.

MORE National ARTICLES

Ontario Landowners Sign Deal With Agency Looking To Store Used Nuclear Fuel

Ontario Landowners Sign Deal With Agency Looking To Store Used Nuclear Fuel
The agreement with the Nuclear Waste Management Organization leaves South Bruce as one of two possible sites for a deep geological repository, along with an area near Ignace in northern Ontario.

Ontario Landowners Sign Deal With Agency Looking To Store Used Nuclear Fuel

One Body Found As Police Search For Missing French Snowmobilers For Third Day

One Body Found As Police Search For Missing French Snowmobilers For Third Day
Quebec provincial police say they've found the body of one of the five missing snowmobilers from France in the province's Lac-Saint-Jean region.

One Body Found As Police Search For Missing French Snowmobilers For Third Day

Canadian Aid Worker's Child-Sex Conviction In Nepal Upheld; Sentence Cut

Canadian Aid Worker's Child-Sex Conviction In Nepal Upheld; Sentence Cut
A prominent Canadian aid worker in Nepal has lost his appeal of a conviction for sexually assaulting two children but saw his sentence cut by one year to eight, members of his legal team said on Friday.    

Canadian Aid Worker's Child-Sex Conviction In Nepal Upheld; Sentence Cut

Hamilton Police Looking For Two Suspects After Seven-Year-Old Boy Shot At Home

Hamilton Police Looking For Two Suspects After Seven-Year-Old Boy Shot At Home
Hamilton Police Det. Sgt. Jim Callender said the boy is in stable condition after being struck by at least one bullet fired from the back yard of the home just before 8 p.m. on Thursday.

Hamilton Police Looking For Two Suspects After Seven-Year-Old Boy Shot At Home

Man Wants Sexual Assault Conviction Overturned In Light Of Appeal Court Ruling

Man Wants Sexual Assault Conviction Overturned In Light Of Appeal Court Ruling
One of two men convicted in a high-profile sexual assault trial in Toronto filed a notice of appeal on Thursday, referencing the Court of Appeal for Ontario ruling released that same day.

Man Wants Sexual Assault Conviction Overturned In Light Of Appeal Court Ruling

Things For People In Canada To Know About The Coronavirus

Concerns about a viral outbreak in China have put global health officials on alert, but how much of a threat is the coronavirus to Canadians?

Things For People In Canada To Know About The Coronavirus