Wednesday, July 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

Quebec police reporting uptick in online threats

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Sep, 2020 09:53 PM
  • Quebec police reporting uptick in online threats

Quebec provincial police are warning of a spike in online threats directed at the general public and towards politicians.

Between March and September, police received 300 complaints from politicians about online threats compared with 53 complaints received during the same period in 2019, Chief Insp. Guy Lapointe said Thursday on Twitter.

Overall, he said police received 1,748 complaints from people about online threats between January and September 2020, more than double the 713 complaints they received during the same period last year.

Earlier this week, interim Parti Quebecois Leader Pascal Berube called out online threats posted against him and his partner as politicians of all stripes denounced the comments.

Liberal Leader Dominique Anglade said the rise in complaints isn't indicative of politicians being more sensitive, but partly explained by the stresses of the pandemic.

"No I don't think we're less tolerant," Anglade told reporters Thursday in Quebec City. "I think there's an increase and it's due to the fact that everyone is more sensitive, people are going through a tough period right now."

Anglade said she hasn't been the subject of direct threats, but said she has received comments too disgusting to repeat publicly. Part of the solution may lie in more mental health supports for citizens, she added.

"We have to stay calm, we have to denounce what's going on, but we have to also realize that it's what people are going through right now and they don't filter the way they used to."

Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, some social media users have lobbed insults and threats at Quebec officials about government measures to stop the spread of the novel coronavirus.

Quebec's public health director, Dr. Horacio Arruda, filed a complaint with provincial police in late July after personal information, including his home address, was shared on social media.

Premier Francois Legault, who has also been subject to threats online, said the numbers released by provincial police Thursday should serve as an important reminder.

"Police are making sure that the ones making those threats on social media, that they have consequences," Legault told a news conference. "So they better be careful before pushing 'enter' because they may have some consequences."

MORE National ARTICLES

Reactions to O'Toole winning Tory race

Reactions to O'Toole winning Tory race
"Congratulations to (Erin O'Toole) on a hard-fought campaign. It’s now time for our (Conservative) party and movement to come together, and to focus on what's most important: ensuring our country gets moving in the right direction again.

Reactions to O'Toole winning Tory race

Ministers pan Iranian report on PS752 downing

Ministers pan Iranian report on PS752 downing
Two federal cabinet ministers say they expect more answers from Iranian officials about an air strike that downed a passenger plane earlier this year, killing everyone on board.

Ministers pan Iranian report on PS752 downing

N.B. election campaign enters second week

N.B. election campaign enters second week
New Brunswick's Liberal leader is promising to leverage more money from the federal government to pay for infrastructure projects across the province.

N.B. election campaign enters second week

Day one on the job for new Tory leader

Day one on the job for new Tory leader
Erin O'Toole begins a new political life as the leader of the federal Conservative party.

Day one on the job for new Tory leader

Racialized students say business schools 'hostile'

Racialized students say business schools 'hostile'
Business school students in Ontario are sounding the alarm about what they call outright racism from fellow students and a lack of equity and diversity training among faculty.

Racialized students say business schools 'hostile'

Study calls for new approach to overdose crisis

Study calls for new approach to overdose crisis
Canada needs a new approach to tackle its overdose crisis, says the lead author of a new study that highlights a prevalence of overdoses involving non-prescribed fentanyl and stimulants in British Columbia.

Study calls for new approach to overdose crisis