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Tories tell candidate who raised concern over ‘climate lockdown’ to take down videos

Click to play video: 'O’Toole dodges questions on candidate who raised concern over ‘climate lockdown’'
O’Toole dodges questions on candidate who raised concern over ‘climate lockdown’
WATCH ABOVE: O'Toole dodges questions on candidate who raised concern over 'climate lockdown' – Aug 29, 2021

The Tories reprimanded a longtime member of the Conservative caucus over her comments on climate change, Global News has learned.

The Conservative Party told Global News on Sunday that Cheryl Gallant was told to take down videos from her YouTube channel and that she has to fully support all parts of the party’s platform or else she will no longer be a Conservative candidate.

The videos in question included one in which Gallant, who is up for re-election in the Ottawa Valley riding of Renfrew—Nipissing—Pembroke, warned constituents that the Liberals are preparing for a “climate lockdown.”

A “climate lockdown” refers to governments implementing certain restrictions, like those imposed by governments to limit the spread of COVID-19, in order to curb the long-term effects of climate change.

In an earlier statement Sunday evening, federal Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole said that any candidates who don’t support his plan on climate change, or any other part of his platform, would not be part of a future Conservative caucus.

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“If there are candidates who don’t support it—or any other part of Canada’s Recovery Plan—they won’t be sitting in the caucus of a future Conservative government.”

Gallant’s YouTube page does not show any more content on it, though her Facebook page still contains an assortment of videos except for the one in which she accuses the Liberals of preparing the “climate lockdown.”

The party said earlier that Gallant removed a video she posted in June that included a photo of Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau appearing to have some sort of noose around his neck.

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Everyday Joe: Canadian elections

“In light of events unfolding today, it’s understandable how this photo can be misconstrued without context,” party spokesman Cory Hann said in an email. “That’s why Ms. Gallant has removed her video.”

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The events Hann referred to were angry crowds of anti-Trudeau agitators who have disrupted his campaign events in recent days, often hurling expletives and threatening violence. Their actions were deemed a threat too great to proceed with Trudeau’s planned rally in Bolton, Ont., Friday and delayed his Sunday event in Cambridge, Ont., for more than hour as they surrounded his campaign buses shouting slurs and profanity.

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At the Cambridge event, one person carried a sign with a manipulated picture of Trudeau about to be executed by hanging.

Hann said the photo Gallant used was one Trudeau had posed for himself, recreating a 1968 image of his father, prime minister Pierre Trudeau, who had pretended to hang himself with his own tie at a press club event.

The original photo clearly shows that Trudeau is holding the cord himself, and that it is a lanyard attached to a plastic ID badge. Gallant’s version had cropped the image so it was not clear that Trudeau was holding the cord himself.

“How long do you think it will take before the Trudeau Liberals start calling for a climate lockdown?” Gallant asks in the video.

“Trudeau is counting on Liberal-minded Canadians not looking too closely at his agenda. If they did, they might realize Trudeau’s a con man and climate change may be his biggest grift,” she said.

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Click to play video: 'Canada election: O’Toole ‘strongly’ condemns protesting on campaign trail'
Canada election: O’Toole ‘strongly’ condemns protesting on campaign trail

 

Gallant also sent correspondence to her constituents before the election started, asking them if they were in favour of a “climate lockdown.”

O’Toole was asked multiple times Sunday if he agreed with Gallant’s statements or the anti-climate change sentiment behind them and did not once answer the question.

He has previously said his party is both focused on running a positive campaign and has a plan to tackle climate change. On Sunday he said Canadians are tired of lockdowns and reiterated his focus is on talking to residents about his party’s plan to help the country’s economy recover from the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We’re not running on things that were said five months ago, five years ago,” he said.

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Gallant did not immediately respond to request for comment.

The only response came from a tweet she sent Sunday evening.

“I’m proud to run on Canada’s Recovery Plan, in its entirety,” she wrote, referencing the name of the Conservative platform.

O’Toole has denounced the angry crowds that have dogged Trudeau, and told four Conservative volunteers who appeared in the crowd in Bolton Friday that they were no longer welcome in the campaign.

On Sunday, Trudeau pointed to the noisy crowd trying to intimidate and drown out his event as proof O’Toole needed to condemn Gallant’s comments to show her supporters and protesters that they are wrong.

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“We know they don’t listen to me,” he said. “Perhaps they will listen to Erin O’Toole if he tells them that climate change is real. If he tells them that vaccines are safe and secure and demonstrates with real leadership, how we’re going to move forward as a country to be safer, to be better and more prosperous.”

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“That’s the choice that Erin O’Toole needs to make right now around Cheryl Gallant and all of these conspiracy theories being peddled.

O’Toole’s campaign stop in Saint-Hyacinthe, Que., also saw the Tory leader propose a tax credit he said is meant to help small businesses bounce back from losses incurred during pandemic-related lockdowns.

The incentive dubbed the “Rebuild Main Street tax credit” would allow individuals who invest up to $100,000 in a small business to claim a 25 per cent tax break over the next two years. O’Toole also pledged to offer loans of up to $200,000 to small and medium-sized businesses.

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O’Toole also spoke to a crowd of 180 masked Conservative supporters in Trois-Rivieres, Que., championing the party’s plans to support the province where it hopes to pick up seats from the Liberals and Bloc Quebecois.

Climate change has long been a thorny issue for O’Toole and the party he leads.

In March, Conservatives rejected a motion to declare climate change as real during the party’s convention, a result O’Toole said was a distraction.

He later released a climate platform that for the first time saw Conservatives include some form of carbon pricing.

— With files from Global News

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