You dont want us to be powerful Bernier says he and the PPC arent going away
When Maxime Bernier was arrested for violating Manitobaâs public health orders after attending a rally against COVID measures in June, the leader of the Peopleâs Party of Canada was asked if he was carrying any weapons.
âOnly my words,â he responded.
If words are weapons, Bernier likes to keep his sharp. Moments into his speech at a recent rally in Saint John, N.B., Bernier had already accused Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau of âacting like a dictatorâ and described COVID-19 mask mandates, lockdowns and vaccine passports as âmedical tyranny.â
He goes even further on social media, branding Trudeau as a âdangerous psychopath,â and accusing NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh of being a âfan of terrorist sympathizers and communist mass murderers,â for tweets praising former Cuban leader Fidel Castro after his death. Conservative Leader Erin OâToole has been labelled âRed Erinâ and a Liberal in disguise.
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Read more: Maxime Bernier loses his riding in Beauce
In an interview, the 58-year-old Bernier said he has no intention of changing his platform or his tone, despite winning no seats and garnering less than two per cent of the vote in the last election.
âI wonât pander to your vote, and we are the only political party that is not doing political correctness,â he said in a phone interview from Alberta. âI said, âItâs the end of that. Thereâs no taboo subject for us and weâre going to say what we have to say.â
Since its inception, Bernierâs party has challenged traditional Canadian orthodoxy with proposals that include drastically cutting immigration, forging ahead with pipeline projects, pulling out of the Paris climate accord and abandoning what his party calls âunrealistic greenhouse gas emission reduction targets.â
If elected this time, he said he would phase out all COVID-19 spending programs and balance the budget within four years by ending corporate welfare, cutting spending on foreign aid and the United Nations and defunding the CBC.
4:28 Global News Morning Peterborough: Meet Nathan Lang, representing the Peopleâs Party of Canada in Northumberland-Peterborough South Global News Morning Peterborough: Meet Nathan Lang, representing the Peopleâs Party of Canada in Northumberland-Peterborough SouthBut this campaign, his attention has shifted to fighting COVID-19 measures such as mask mandates, lockdowns, and vaccine passports, the latter of which he describes as unconstitutional and divisive.
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âWe believe in freedom and we believe in freedom of choice,â he said.
âEveryone has the right to decide whether they wear the mask, whether theyâll get the vaccine.â
However, he said he is neither anti-mask, nor anti-vaccine. While heâs chosen not be vaccinated against COVID-19, believing his risk of dying from the disease to be low, he said he encouraged his father, who is 87 years old, to get both shots.
Read more: Maxime Bernier, party supporters, get into heated exchange with N.B. education minister
The man now calling for a revolution, albeit one he describes as âcommon sense,â had a relatively conventional beginning in politics.
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He was first elected to the Canadian House of Commons as a Conservative in 2006 in the same riding south of Quebec City that his father, Gilles, had represented for years, and went on to hold several cabinet positions in Stephen Harperâs government.
Bernier came a close second to Andrew Scheer in the 2017 Conservative leadership race before declaring the party âtoo intellectually and morally corrupt to be reformedâ and leaving to form his own right-wing, libertarian-leaning party.
The Peopleâs party was shut out in the 2019 federal election, and Bernier lost his own seat in the Beauce region.
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Two years later, the man who has long embraced the nickname âMad Maxâ doesnât hide his anger toward the political establishment and media he feels are trying to shut his party out.
1:33 Canada election: Trudeau responds after Conservative Party candidate quits over sexual assault allegation Canada election: Trudeau responds after Conservative Party candidate quits over sexual assault allegationIn recent days, heâs gone from New Brunswick to Alberta to hold rallies, his voice rising to an energetic crescendo as he rails against his rivals.
Bernier was not issued an invitation to participate in the TVA debate that took Thursday night, or next weekâs leadersâ debates. The Leadersâ Debates Commission said to be invited to participate, a political party must meet at least one of three requirements, including having an MP in the House of Commons by someone initially elected under the party banner.
The others are that a partyâs candidates had to receive at least four per cent of the number of valid votes cast in the 2019 election (the PPC received 1.6 per cent), or have public opinion polls show it has at least four per cent of national support five days after the election date is called.
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Bernier says itâs because others are afraid of his ideas.
Read more: Maxime Bernier released after arrest in Manitoba for violating public health orders
âYou know what Iâm saying is powerful, and you donât want us to be powerful,â he said. âBut we will be.â
In some ways, anger is having a moment on this campaign trail. Bernier has refused to condemn the angry crowds who have heckled and cursed Trudeau at his campaign stops, prompting the Liberal leader to cancel at least one event over security concerns.
âWe are in a free country and people have the right to express their point of view peacefully,â he said of the protests.
âPeople are mad and they have a reason to be mad. Our freedoms are under attack.â
How deep that anger runs, and whether it will translate into more votes for Bernierâs party on Sept. 20, remains to be seen. While the partyâs polling results have fluctuated somewhat, some have shown a slight bump in support. A Leger poll released Tuesday showed support for the PPC at three per cent among decided voters, which was one point higher than the Greens.
1:50 Canada election: Conservatives call out Liberals over Twitter video Canada election: Conservatives call out Liberals over Twitter video â" Aug 23, 2021The online poll of 2,005 Canadians, conducted Aug. 27 to 30 in collaboration with The Canadian Press, cannot be assigned a margin of error because internet-based polls are not considered random samples.
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Still, returning to the House of Commons remains an uphill battle, and for now, Bernier is tempering expectations. He thinks his party can surpass the Greens, and says heâll do his best to be re-elected in Beauce and bring others with him to Ottawa.
But he says that whatever happens on Sept. 20, heâll be there for the next election, and the one after that, and heâll be preaching the same message.
âIâm 58 years old, Iâm in shape, and Iâll be there for the next 10 years,â he said.
âWeâre going to win that battle. We can stop an army of soldiers, but you canât stop an idea when the timing is there.â
© 2021 The Canadian Press
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