Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Liberal Party Uses Remembrance Day To Identify Potential Supporters, Donors

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Nov, 2015 12:17 PM
  • Liberal Party Uses Remembrance Day To Identify Potential Supporters, Donors
OTTAWA — Lest we forget, politicking evidently never stops, even on Remembrance Day.
 
The Liberal party, flush from the Oct. 19 election victory, used the solemn occasion Wednesday to continue trying to accumulate information on potential supporters and donors.
 
The governing party issued an email from new Veterans Affairs Minister Kent Hehr, which encouraged readers to add their names to an online message of thanks to members of the Armed Forces and veterans "for their service and sacrifice."
 
Such email solicitations, known as data mining, are commonly employed by political parties to glean names, email addresses and postal codes which are added to data banks used to identify supporters and financial contributors.
 
NDP veterans affairs critic Irene Mathyssen was dumbfounded that the Liberals would use veterans for partisan ends.
 
"To utilize this emotional day in such a cynical way makes me very sad," she said in an interview.
 
"It is something that is, I think, beneath the dignity of any government ... (Veterans) are individuals and they matter. Their health and what happens to them matters and to conduct a mining expedition, I'm speechless, I'm very, very distressed by that."
 
However, a Liberal party spokesman said Hehr's message was "non-partisan" and was posted on various online platforms, as well as emailed to people already on the party's mailing list.
 
"The objective was not to be partisan but to make sure that the largest number of Canadians could see the minister's message and be engaged in the discussion," said Olivier Duchesneau.
 
 
Hehr posted the same message on his Facebook page but it did not include the data-mining device of asking readers to add their names to a note of thanks to veterans.
 
The message itself veered into the political realm, reiterating various Liberal campaign promises aimed at honouring the country's "sacred obligation" to veterans.
 
Hehr said he's excited to be the minister who will be "rolling out all of the commitments we made during the campaign in the weeks and months to come."
 
He listed Liberal campaign pledges to provide lifelong disability pensions to veterans, boost financial aid for wounded veterans, pay for veterans' complete education, increase support for families caring for veterans dealing with the aftermath of war and reopen veterans service centres closed by the previous Conservative government.
 
But his message was also personal; Hehr recounted how a drive-by shooting left him a quadriplegic at 21, and noted that, while such moments of life-changing, extreme violence are rare in civilian life, they can be an "everyday risk" for members of the military.
 
"When I was injured, I found the support I needed to rebuild my life and eventually go on to have a successful career in public life," said Hehr, a former Alberta MLA.
 
"In those moments I felt alone, there was always someone, somewhere I could turn to. I want Canada's servicemen and women and Canada's veterans to know they too are not alone, that all Canadians stand with them."

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver Indigenous History Exhibition Wins Governor General's Award

Vancouver Indigenous History Exhibition Wins Governor General's Award
The exhibit combines artifacts and new technologies such as 3-D printing at three different locations to tell the story of the ancient Musqueam villages and burial sites that Vancouver was built on.

Vancouver Indigenous History Exhibition Wins Governor General's Award

Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin Suggests Using Electronic Media To Help End Aboriginal Stereotypes

Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin Suggests Using Electronic Media To Help End Aboriginal Stereotypes
Beverley McLachlin told an administration of justice conference in Saskatoon that media have been used to shape a certain perception of indigenous people, sometimes in very negative ways.

Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin Suggests Using Electronic Media To Help End Aboriginal Stereotypes

Umbrella Identified As Suspected Firearm That Prompted Fredericton School Lockdowns

Umbrella Identified As Suspected Firearm That Prompted Fredericton School Lockdowns
Police in Fredericton say a suspected firearm being carried by a man in the city this morning turned out to be an umbrella.

Umbrella Identified As Suspected Firearm That Prompted Fredericton School Lockdowns

Saskatoon Police Clearing Path To Solution Of Big Snowblower Theft

Saskatoon Police Clearing Path To Solution Of Big Snowblower Theft
Police in Saskatoon are swept up in an investigation into the theft early Wednesday morning of $25,000 worth of new snowblowers.

Saskatoon Police Clearing Path To Solution Of Big Snowblower Theft

Lockdown Lifted At Wilfrid Laurier University After Online Threat

Lockdown Lifted At Wilfrid Laurier University After Online Threat
The university's Waterloo, Ont., campus was closed early Friday morning and students and faculty were told to stay away.

Lockdown Lifted At Wilfrid Laurier University After Online Threat

Crown Wants 4-5 Years Prison For Man, Found Guilty In Deadly Toronto Scaffolding Collapse

Crown Wants 4-5 Years Prison For Man, Found Guilty In Deadly Toronto Scaffolding Collapse
Vadim Kazenelson was found guilty in June on four counts of criminal negligence causing death and one count of criminal negligence causing bodily harm.

Crown Wants 4-5 Years Prison For Man, Found Guilty In Deadly Toronto Scaffolding Collapse