Monday, June 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

Why politicians stray in non-English messaging

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Feb, 2023 04:55 PM
  • Why politicians stray in non-English messaging

VICTORIA - British Columbia Liberal leader Kevin Falcon says he supports supervised drug injection sites, but when member of the legislature Teresa Wat spoke to the audience of a Mandarin news show last week, she had a different message.

Wat, speaking on Phoenix TV's Daily Topic Show, said "we are very opposed to so-called safe injection sites," remarks she later said "accidentally misrepresented" her party's position.

The Liberal MLA representing Richmond Centre is the latest politician to be accused of straying from an official line or tailoring a message to non-English-speaking audiences.

“There is something very powerful about the situational context for delivering a message," said David Black, a political communication associate professor at Royal Roads University.

"If you are speaking about a policy that you might think might be difficult for a given audiences to receive, you are going to adjust, you are going to modify, you might even change that message because it’s almost more important that the message be received well than it be entirely accurate.”

Victor Ho, the former editor-in-chief at the Vancouver edition of Chinese-language Sing Tao Daily newspaper, said Wat's remarks represent one of the biggest gaffes he can remember involving mixed messages to different communities.

He said Phoenix TV's viewership skews heavily toward people with mainland Chinese origins, and it was possible for politicians to forget their broader constituency in discussions with specific groups.

But the onus remained on a politician to be accountable to all constituents for their positions, he said.

"You should have a standardized opinion, no matter if it's for the Chinese community or the mainstream society here in Canada," Ho said. He added that "otherwise, you can't take accountability of all your stakeholders."

In Wat's case, she said in a video sent by the BC Liberal caucus on Wednesday that she "used the wrong choice of words" to describe the party's position on injection sites in the Phoenix interview, posted online on Feb. 9.

There have been other cases of Canadian politicians accused of tailored messaging to non-English-speaking audiences, in situations that have cost some more dearly.

In 2019, then-Canadian ambassador to China John McCallum told Chinese-language journalists that Huawei Technologies executive Meng Wanzhou had "strong arguments" against her extradition to the United States, where she was wanted on fraud charges.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau initially resisted calls to fire McCallum but then dismissed the ambassador when he made more remarks about Meng's case a few days later.

In the 2019 Burnaby South byelection won by federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, federal Liberal candidate Karen Wang sent messages on Chinese-language social media platform WeChat that said she was the only Chinese candidate, while Singh was "of Indian descent."

Wang stepped down from the race when the post was reported in English media.

Falcon, who has previously called himself a supporter of "safe injection sites," said Wednesday that his party supported "supervised consumption sites," and he had spoken to Wat about her comments.

"I think that she would be the first to tell you that she didn't express it as perfectly as she intended to," Falcon said, adding that he believes Wat — who is the BC Liberals' Shadow Minister for multiculturalism, anti-racism initiatives, arts and culture — misspoke and made an "honest mistake."

"I'm very comfortable she has not formed a new position or (was) suggesting that we have a different position as a party."

BC Green Leader Sonia Furstenau said she is more concerned that the incident signals intensifying partisanship in the legislature, taking attention away from dealing with the drug crisis itself. Wat's comments first surfaced in English media through the BC NDP caucus's YouTube and Twitter channels.

"Unfortunately, when we see that become more and more of the so-called debate that we are having, which is trying to pitch parties against each other and wedge them, this doesn't do well to serve the people of this province who we are supposed to be serving," Furstenau said.

Black said that a politician can’t lose sight of their job of representing their party’s views, especially in a multicultural society where communication is increasingly through languages other than English and French.

“You must represent ideas that you do not necessarily believe or that your audiences may not find comfortable and that’s the burden of leadership,” said Black.

MORE National ARTICLES

Rare case of monkeypox in a man who recently traveled to Canada from US

Rare case of monkeypox in a man who recently traveled to Canada from US
U.S. health officials said they are in contact with officials in the U.K. and Canada as part of the investigation. The U.S. case poses no risk to the public, and the Massachusetts resident is hospitalized but in good condition, officials said.

Rare case of monkeypox in a man who recently traveled to Canada from US

Omicron tripled cases in Canadian adults: study

Omicron tripled cases in Canadian adults: study
More than 5,000 Canadian adults — members of the Angus Reid Forum, a public polling cohort — participated in the fourth phase of the Action to Beat Coronavirus (Ab-C) study. The findings of the study were published as a letter to the editor in The New England Journal of Medicine Wednesday.

Omicron tripled cases in Canadian adults: study

Liberals reject NDP call to hike GST rebate

Liberals reject NDP call to hike GST rebate
Singh wants Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to fund the benefit increases by redirecting a $2.6-billion tax credit promised in the recent budget to help companies build carbon capture and storage systems. 

Liberals reject NDP call to hike GST rebate

WATCH: Soul Counsel- a new way to leave a legacy behind

WATCH: Soul Counsel- a new way to leave a legacy behind
Find out about some of the services of Soul Counsel such as state planning, dispute resolution, succession planning, and much more with Founder and Chief Vibes Officer, Sukhminder Virk.    

WATCH: Soul Counsel- a new way to leave a legacy behind

Women being followed by a white van near Tamanawis Secondary according to social media post

Women being followed by a white van near Tamanawis Secondary according to social media post
The Surrey RCMP Special Victims Unit (SVU) was advised of the social media post and has reached out to the individual who posted it in order to seek more information. To date, SVU have not received any reported incidents of women being followed by men in a white van. 

Women being followed by a white van near Tamanawis Secondary according to social media post

Burnaby RCMP is looking to identify two suspects that were involved in two break-ins and mail theft incidents in March.

Burnaby RCMP is looking to identify two suspects that were involved in two break-ins and mail theft incidents in March.
On March 21, 2022 at approximately 2:30 p.m., two suspects broke into two residential complexes in the 7200-block of Collier Street and proceeded to pry the main panel of the mailboxes open and steal all the mail.

Burnaby RCMP is looking to identify two suspects that were involved in two break-ins and mail theft incidents in March.