Tuesday, June 2, 2026
ADVT 
National

Trudeau resists calls to fire Carolyn Bennett

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jun, 2021 03:48 PM
  • Trudeau resists calls to fire Carolyn Bennett

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is resisting calls to fire Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett over a text message he acknowledges was "wrong" and "hurtful" and harmed his government's progress on reconciliation.

Bennett apologized Thursday for texting "Pension?" to Jody Wilson-Raybould in response to the Independent MP's tweet urging Trudeau to quit "jockeying" for an election in light of the discovery of what are believed to be 715 unmarked graves of Indigenous children in Saskatchewan.

Members of Parliament must serve for six years before becoming eligible for a pension, so Bennett appeared to be suggesting that Wilson-Raybould, who is Indigenous, was only concerned about losing her pension if she were voted out before she hits the six-year mark in October.

"Of course, I'm deeply disappointed. She did the right thing by apologizing because it was the wrong thing to do," Trudeau told a news conference Friday.

"As a government, as ministers, as Canadians, we need to be focused on the work that needs to happen for Indigenous people across this country who have been going through extremely difficult times, not just in these past weeks but over years and generations."

He added: "Mistakes like this are hurtful and nudge us in the wrong direction instead of steadily moving in the right direction."

Trudeau's government has faced intense scrutiny over its handling of Indigenous issues since the discovery of an unmarked burial site at a former residential school in British Columbia last month. Thursday's news of more graves at a Saskatchewan institution has magnified the public concern.

Wilson-Raybould tweeted a screenshot of Bennett's text message on Thursday. The Vancouver Granville MP said it was racist, misogynistic and reflected the stereotype that Indigenous people are "lazy & only want $."

Bennett issued a swift apology on her Twitter account, saying she let "interpersonal dynamics" get the better of her and had apologized directly to Wilson-Raybould for the "insensitive and inappropriate" comment.

Trudeau said he spoke with Bennett Friday morning and he knows her "heart" and how hard she has worked for years on improving Canada's relationship with Indigenous Peoples.

"We both understand that there is now even more work for her to do and I know we will do it together," he said.

Charlie Angus, NDP critic for Indigenous youth, continued to call for Bennett's firing on Friday.

"On a day when Canadians were grappling with the discovery of hundreds of more bodies in unmarked graves, the minister took a cheap, derogatory stab at an Indigenous leader grieving for these lost lives," Angus said in a statement.

"You can't say reconciliation is a priority while tolerating this kind of behaviour from your minister. If anything, Prime Minister Trudeau highlighted the fact that he will say one thing and act in a completely different way."

The Union of BC Indian Chiefs has also called on Bennett to resign, saying it is "deeply disturbed and disgusted by the extreme callousness, spite, and ignorance you have shown through the racist message."

"With a single word — 'pension' — you not only decided to perpetuate a damaging racial stereotype, that Indigenous peoples are lazy and only financially motivated — but dismissed the pressing, overarching issue of residential schools, missing and murdered children, and Indigenous rights.''

Wilson-Raybould was appointed by Trudeau as Canada's first Indigenous justice minister. In 2019, she resigned as a cabinet minister and was later booted from the Liberal caucus after she called out the prime minister for pressuring her to secure a deferred prosecution agreement for SNC-Lavalin.

In August 2019, the federal ethics commissioner concluded that Trudeau violated the Conflict of Interest Act by improperly pressuring Wilson-Raybould to halt a criminal prosecution of the Montreal engineering giant on corruption charges related to contracts in Libya.

Wilson-Raybould was re-elected as an Independent MP in October 2019.

MORE National ARTICLES

Top military police officer defends investigations

Top military police officer defends investigations
Liberal and Bloc MPs shut down a similar study at the Commons defence committee on Monday that was specifically looking into allegations involving former defence chief Gen. Jonathan Vance.

Top military police officer defends investigations

China denies mistreatment of two Michaels

China denies mistreatment of two Michaels
The two Michaels were detained in December 2018 in apparent retaliation for Canada's arrest of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou on an extradition request from the United States.

China denies mistreatment of two Michaels

How J&J and AstraZeneca differ from mRNA vaccines

How J&J and AstraZeneca differ from mRNA vaccines
It's the second COVID vaccine to be investigated for a possible link to blood clotting after several European countries temporarily halted use of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine for the same reason last month.

How J&J and AstraZeneca differ from mRNA vaccines

Liberals propose right to a healthy environment

Liberals propose right to a healthy environment
The proposed amendment is included in a new bill introduced in the House of Commons today, C-28, which would strengthen The Canadian Environmental Protection Act.

Liberals propose right to a healthy environment

Health Canada investigating J&J blood clot reports

Health Canada investigating J&J blood clot reports
The clots were observed along with reduced platelet counts making the usual treatment for blood clots, the blood thinner heparin, potentially "dangerous.''

Health Canada investigating J&J blood clot reports

Air Canada, Ottawa agree to $5.9B aid package

Air Canada, Ottawa agree to $5.9B aid package
Thousands of would-be passengers who paid for tickets remained in the lurch at the end of 2020. Air Canada reported it held $2.3 billion in advance ticket sales during the fourth quarter.

Air Canada, Ottawa agree to $5.9B aid package