Charming Beijing Captivates Liberal Loyalty
"[These comments] deeply offended, [demonstrating a] terrible lapse in judgement [however, the episode could serve as a] teachable moment.""This is a person of integrity who served his community as a senior police officer for ... more than a quarter of [a] century. He's made a terrible lapse in judgement.""He's made his apology. He's made it to the public, he's made it to the individual concerned, he's made it directly to me, and he's going to continue with his candidacy.""He has my confidence."Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney"[The response by Mr. Carney is indeed a] teachable moment.""It teaches us that Mark Carney will never stand up for Canada.""If Mark Carney won't stand up for a Canadian against this foreign hostile regime now, how could we ever expect him to stand up for Canada after the election?"Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre"He is a police officer, and he ought to know that when the CCP [Chinese Communist Party] went out and put a bounty on anybody, including Canadians, that cannot be acceptable.""That is intimidation at its worst."NDP MP Jenny Kwan"What we saw was the news of the bounty was sort of re-upped, but we're just watching the open space for anything related to that.""That alone, I think, is a form of coercion.""Spreading, again, the information about the bounty is precisely how malign foreign states seek to silence, harass and coerce."Rapid Response Mechanism head Larisa Galadza, Global Affairs Canada
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Paul Chiang is seeking
re-election in Markham-Unionville, a riding he took from the
Conservatives in 2021 by a margin of fewer than 2,500 votes. |
"If you can take him to the Chinese Consulate General in Toronto, you can get the million-dollar reward",
advised Liberal electoral candidate Paul Chiang to an news conference
comprised of Chinese-language media, in reference to Conservative
candidate Joe Tay who had been charged under the Hong Kong national
security law as a threat to Beijing for his Canada-based YouTube channel
critical of the Beijing-dominated CCP government.
When
the comment hit headlines in the legacy media in Canada, calls for the
Liberal party to disown Mr. Chiang and remove him as a Liberal candidate
for the April 28 federal election expressed the disgust of most
Canadians. Derisory statements by opposing political party candidates
are not uncommon during election campaigns, but seldom do they cross the
line into currying to foreign interference in Canada's affairs and
certainly never to the extent that one candidate incites to violence
against another.
Pressure
came fast and furious even within the Liberal party for Mr. Chaing to
be removed as a candidate in view of his comments last week. The bounty
in question, in Hong Kong dollars $1 million, transcribes to $183,000
in Canadian currency. Any taker could be assured of earning themselves a
reward for luring the Conservative candidate to appear at the Chinese
Consulate General in Toronto where he would be spirited to China and
imprisoned as a traitor to Beijing -- but certainly not to China.
Mr.
Chaing informed the Chinese-language media that given Mr. Tay's
position on China and Beijing's response, should Mr. Tay be elected to
Parliament, the Hong King criminal charge would be a cause of "great controversy", according to the Ming Pao newspaper.
And no doubt it would, since the Liberal Party goes out of its way to
pacify Beijing, and continues to build on its relationship through
trade, despite the assaults on Canadian sovereignty where Canadians have
been falsely imprisoned, Canadians have received the death penalty in
China, and Chinese interference in Canadian affairs is deeply troubling.
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Liberal Leader Mark Carney says Paul Chiang will remain a candidate under his banner, despite calls to drop the Markham-Unionville incumbent for suggesting people turn in a Conservative candidate to the Chinese consulate and collect a bounty. CBC News |
Even
so, even when Canadian Intelligence has warned government on many
occasions through updated reports that China is among those countries --
foremost among those countries -- that have used their expatriate
Chinese-Canadian community originally from Mainland China to act as
agents for Beijing, as well as instructing all expats that it is their
ancestral patriotic duty to infiltrate and capture whatever advances in
technology, science, medicine, and military news helpful to be conveyed
to China's possession.
Mr. Chiang himself saw fit to apologize soon after his comments were publicized:
"The
comments I made were deplorable and a complete lapse of judgement on
the seriousness of the matter. I sincerely apologize and deeply regret
my comments."
"I
will always continue to stand shoulder to shoulder with the people of
Hong Kong in their fight to safeguard their human rights and freedoms."
And
while unelected PM-incumbent Mark Carney is satisfied to let the matter
lie there and continue to approve Mr. Chiang as a Liberal candidate,
the man himself took the initiative to resign from the Liberal
candidacy. Whether his apology is sincere is debatable. He still took
the right course in apologizing and taking himself out of the election.
There is no debate that Mr. Carney, on the other hand, has often engaged
in dishonourable conduct. He has bent the truth to suit his fabricated
explanations.
And
on this occasion he has spectacularly failed to act with conscience and
integrity. Canadians should hold him to account for this, yet another
lapse in judgement on his part. On the other hand, government officials
tasked with identifying and responding to foreign threats during the
election period acknowledge they are monitoring the situation closely.
Moreover, the RCMP has opened an investigation in the matter. While the
man aspiring to be elected Prime Minister of Canada succumbed to his own
lack of moral integrity.
Mr.
Tay has been left uneasy and concerned over his safety, given the
obvious nature of the threats against him posed by a foreign government
whose record on human rights is abysmal. He has stated that the
situation left him fearing for his safety. Spurring him to get in touch
with the RCMP for his personal protection, and demanding that Carney
fire Chiang. A demand that thirteen pro-democracy groups in Canada
linked to Hong Kong produced a statement urging the Liberal Party to "send a clear message" in removing Chiang's candidacy, making it clear they cannot accept his "insincere apology".
"I want to be clear: no apology is sufficient.""Threats like these are the tradecraft of the Chinese Communist Party to interfere in Canada.""And they are not just aimed at me. They are intended to send a chilling signal to the entire community in order to force compliance to Beijing's political goals."Conservative federal election candidate Joe Tay
"[Foreign interference, including instances of transnational repression, continue to be a] pervasive threat in Canada [and the federal police takes all reports and allegations seriously].""The RCMP is looking into the matter, however no specific details can be provided at this time.""To ensure the integrity of our investigations, the RCMP typically does not disclose information relating to investigations unless criminal charges are laid, rendering it a matter of public record."RCMP spokesperson Kristine Kelly
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Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, speaking in New Brunswick, says Liberal Leader Mark Carney’s decision to stand by candidate Paul Chiang, who called for people to turn in Conservative candidate Joe Tay for a Chinese bounty, ‘teaches us that Mark Carney will never stand up for Canada.’ Poilievre added that he spoke to Tay and he is ‘very, very rattled.’ CBC |
"It is a teachable moment. It teaches us that Mark Carney will never stand up for Canada.""The Chinese government literally wants to kill Joe Tay because he’s a political dissident. And this candidate said that that should happen.""I have never in my life seen a prime minister unwilling to protect a Canadian citizen against a foreign government that wants to take his life through a bounty."Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre
Labels: Canadian General Election, Chinese Communist Party, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, Foreign Interference, Liberal Leader Mark Carney
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