Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Twitter requires Maxime Bernier to delete tweet

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Sep, 2021 04:58 PM
  • Twitter requires Maxime Bernier to delete tweet

OTTAWA - Twitter has required People's Party of Canada Leader Maxime Bernier to remove a tweet that insulted individual reporters and shared their contact information.

In a tweet Wednesday, Bernier called three journalists from mainstream news outlets "idiots" and listed their emails, writing: "They want to play dirty, we will play dirty too."

He encouraged his 160,000 followers to contact the reporters, posting excerpts of their requests for comment after Monday's federal election.

"(T)ell them what you think of their disgusting smear jobs," Bernier wrote.

The journalists from CTV News, Global News and the Hill Times had asked about the People's Party's endorsement by white nationalist groups, fears among racialized Canadians about what the party represents and whether it tolerates potential acts of hate by supporters on the campaign trail.

Hill Times reporter Neil Moss told The Canadian Press he experienced an uptick in harassment in the form of emails.

The People's Party did not respond to a request for comment from The Canadian Press.

The Canadian Association of Journalists said journalists have a legal and ethical obligation to send questions to politicians and that going after reporters for doing their job is "unacceptable and dangerous."

The post amounts to "intimidation tactics right out of an authoritarian’s playbook," said association president Brent Jolly.

"Mr. Bernier's effort to harass journalists, to sic his followers on journalists for basically just doing their job and asking questions and holding them to account, it is absolutely deplorable," he said in an interview.

Jolly compared Bernier's tack to some Republicans' efforts at "demonizing the press."

"He's channelling, it seems, a lot of the same behaviours that we see from American politicians and their relationships with the media," he said. "This is what we've seen with Donald Trump and other right-wing politicians."

A Twitter Canada spokesman says the company took enforcement action against Bernier's account for violating its information privacy policy. The account was suspended Wednesday and reactivated after Bernier took down the offending tweets at 11 p.m., according to the company.

Founded by Bernier in 2018 after he narrowly lost the Conservative leadership race to Andrew Scheer, the People's Party of Canada occupies turf to the right of the Tories, advocating drastically reduced immigration levels, withdrawal from the Paris climate accord and opposition to COVID-19 restrictions and vaccine passports.

During the election campaign, some protesters against vaccination measures touted PPC signs. The party booted one of its Ontario riding association presidents after allegations surfaced he threw gravel at Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at a whistle stop in London, Ont.

Police later charged Shane Marshall in the incident. The suspect shared the name of the former PPC riding association president, but the party did not confirm he was the same person.

Bernier condemned the attack in a tweet, saying that "physical violence is always wrong."

The former Tory cabinet minister, who self-identifies as a "limited-government conservative," drew boisterous crowds over the past month as he campaigned against vaccine mandates and pandemic lockdowns amid a surging fourth wave.

The CBC said in a release that reporters' work is vital to an informed public and a healthy democracy, and that online harassment of journalists puts their safety at risk.

“When the incitement to harass journalists comes from public figures, it is even worse,” Canada’s public broadcaster said Thursday.

“That the worst of this abuse targets women and racialized journalists should make clear just how dangerous this is.”

The Crown corporation said it will join with other public broadcasters from across the globe next week in a commitment to take joint action against the problem.

 

 

MORE National ARTICLES

243 COVID19 cases for Friday

243 COVID19 cases for Friday
Data from the B.C. Centre for Disease Control show that's the highest daily case count since late May. More than half of the latest cases as well as overall active infections are in the Interior Health region, where an outbreak was declared in the central Okanagan.

243 COVID19 cases for Friday

Two travellers fined $20K each for fake vax docs

Two travellers fined $20K each for fake vax docs
The Public Health Agency of Canada says the travellers also didn't comply with requirements to stay at a government-authorized hotel or to get tested upon arrival.

Two travellers fined $20K each for fake vax docs

Feds run $24B deficit over April and May

Feds run $24B deficit over April and May
The Finance Department's regular fiscal monitor says the budgetary deficit over April and May was $23.8 billion, down from the $86.8 billion recorded over the same months in 2020.    

Feds run $24B deficit over April and May

Feds extend business, worker aid to end of October

Feds extend business, worker aid to end of October
The decision means that wage and rent subsidies for businesses, and income support for workers out of a job or who need to take time off to care for family or stay home sick, will last until Oct. 23.

Feds extend business, worker aid to end of October

Federal data warns of risk of fourth COVID wave

Federal data warns of risk of fourth COVID wave
Canada's chief public health officer says long-term forecasts indicate that a hasty approach to reopening could portend a sharp resurgence of the virus by the end of the summer.

Federal data warns of risk of fourth COVID wave

Top doctors weigh in on Alberta's COVID plan

Top doctors weigh in on Alberta's COVID plan
Chief public health officer Theresa Tam is urging people to continue isolating, get tested for COVID-19 and inform their close contacts even if it is no longer mandated.

Top doctors weigh in on Alberta's COVID plan