Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau Seeks Meeting With Jagmeet Singh To Apologize For Blackface Photos

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Sep, 2019 07:11 PM

    Trudeau has reached out to Singh to talk since the release of three different images showing the Liberal leader in black- or brownface that Singh condemned as personally hurtful.

     

    "I will be apologizing to him personally as a racialized Canadian," Trudeau said Friday at an event in Toronto where he unveiled his party's long-awaited gun control strategy.

     

    "As I have been apologizing to Canadians who have suffered discrimination and intolerance their entire lives in ways some of us like me have never had to experience on a daily basis."

     

    Singh said he is open to talking to the Liberal leader, as long it remains a private conversation, declining to disclose what he'd say to Trudeau.

     
     

    Where he wants to keep the focus, Singh said, is on all of the Canadians who've been hurt by what Trudeau did.

     

    "I've spoken with young people who tell me that if the prime minister can mock their reality, can mock their struggles, then what's to stop other people from saying 'if the prime minister can make fun of people for what they're going through, why can't I?'," Singh said at an event in Windsor, Ont.

     

    The world's press has wasted no time pouncing on three separate instances in the 1990s and 2000s where Trudeau acknowledged he committed the racist act of painting his face and hands black or brown for various costume events.

     

    There were headlines around the globe, Trudeau was the butt of late-night comic jokes in the U.S. Thursday night and even U.S. President Donald Trump weighed in Friday morning.

     

    "I was hoping I wouldn't be asked that question. ... Justin. I'm surprised and I was more surprised when I saw the number of times and I've always had a good relationship with Justin. I just don't know what to tell you. I was surprised by it, actually," he said.

     

    Trudeau sought to change the channel Friday by announcing his party's marquee policy on gun control, which includes a pledge to ban assault rifles. He also promised to allow municipalities the right to ban hand guns, a policy also advocated by the NDP.

     

    Singh was shopping his policy on expanding pharmacare and dental care on the campaign trail Friday.

     

    Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer was also campaigning on the health care theme, pledging $1.5 billion to buy new medical imaging equipment for facilities across the country. He said buying MRI and CT machines to replace aging ones will reduce wait times.

     

    Scheer's party was behind the release of video documenting a third time Trudeau wore blackface, this one shot in the early 1990s. His campaign received the clip and turned it over to Global TV. Trudeau said Friday that video was from a costume day for river guides at the white-water rafting company he worked for in the early 1990s.

     

    Scheer said Friday he's not aware of the existence of any more photos or videos. Trudeau has said he won't say definitively there aren't, as he doesn't necessarily remember everything.

     

    While Trudeau talked of a gun ban, Green Leader Elizabeth May promised a ban of her own — on the kinds of cars the vast majority of people drive. A ban on internal combustion engine passenger vehicles by 2030 is part of her party's broader transportation strategy unveiled Friday which seeks to get to zero-carbon transportation in Canada.

     

    People's Party Leader Maxime Bernier is trying to hold onto his own seat in Quebec and is spending today campaigning there, though he has a swing to Western Canada next week.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Food Fight: Liberals, Tories Trade Shots As Pre-campaign Battles Intensify

    Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor is trying to distinguish the Liberals as a party of scientific, evidence-based policy while she says Conservative Leader Andrew 

    Food Fight: Liberals, Tories Trade Shots As Pre-campaign Battles Intensify

    Huawei Canada Says It Met Federal Security Requirements For New Arctic 4G Project

    Huawei Canada says it has received federal approval to work with a northern telecom company and an Inuit development corporation to extend high-speed 4G

    Huawei Canada Says It Met Federal Security Requirements For New Arctic 4G Project

    Provincial Police Suspend Aerial Search For Missing Businessman, Son

    Provincial Police Suspend Aerial Search For Missing Businessman, Son
    Police say the investigation is ongoing, and they aren't ruling out returning to the air if investigators are able to narrow the search area.

    Provincial Police Suspend Aerial Search For Missing Businessman, Son

    Alberta Judge Denies B.C.'s Bid To Block 'Turn Off The Taps' Bill

    Alberta Judge Denies B.C.'s Bid To Block 'Turn Off The Taps' Bill
    A Calgary judge is denying British Columbia's attempt to block Alberta's so-called Turn Off the Taps bill.

    Alberta Judge Denies B.C.'s Bid To Block 'Turn Off The Taps' Bill

    Group Of Teenagers Visiting Canada From Brazil Assaulted Aboard Vancouver’s 95 B-line For Not Speaking English

    Metro Vancouver Transit Police is appealing for witnesses in the case where group of teenagers visiting Canada from Brazil were assaulted aboard the 95 B-Line bus

    Group Of Teenagers Visiting Canada From Brazil Assaulted Aboard Vancouver’s 95 B-line For Not Speaking English

    Two Men Go Missing In Northern B.C. Near Where Body Is Found

    RCMP in northern British Columbia are searching for two young Vancouver Island men whose vehicle was discovered on fire Friday in the same area where police say a body was found.

    Two Men Go Missing In Northern B.C. Near Where Body Is Found