Skip to main content

Bloc leader tries to define systemic racism on his own

File photo of Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet in 2018. “Systemic racism — I’ve come up with my own definition,” Blanchet told media in French on Parliament Hill on Thursday. Photo by Alex Tétreault

After thousands of Canadians marched in the streets demanding an end to systemic racism, amid repeated displays of deadly or heavy-handed use of force by police, the leader of the Bloc Québécois decided to offer his own definition of the issue.

“Systemic racism — I’ve come up with my own definition. Perhaps I’m a wannabe anthropologist,” Yves-François Blanchet told media in French on Parliament Hill.

Blanchet said he believed in the notion of systemic racism, and called it “a residual effect that is found in some institutions, and results in conduct in those institutions” — but added he felt “a distinction needs to be drawn.”

While “there are individuals that are racist,” Blanchet argued, “one should avoid saying that all individuals in that particular group are racist.”

If someone “fully, deeply believes that systemic racism does not exist within our institutions,” he said, “it does not mean that that person is a racist.”

After thousands of Canadians marched in the streets demanding an end to systemic racism, amid repeated displays of deadly or heavy-handed use of force by police, the leader of the Bloc Québécois decided to offer his own definition of the issue.
The media resource for URL http://twitter.com/theJagmeetSingh/status/1273449551807078400 could not be retrieved.

This month, Canadians joined protests and vigils in many cities calling for an end to systemic racism and discrimination that is rooted in Canada’s history, laws, cultures and institutions.

The Parliamentary Black Caucus released a statement this week discussing the “systemic and insidious nature of racism in our country,” from “daily microaggressions to the rarer, but tragically fatal, hate-filled acts,” and called on Canada to enact urgent reforms.

Former governor general Michaëlle Jean has also said racism against Black and Indigenous people is deeply embedded in institutions, while the Canadian Human Rights Commission said “the roots of anti-Black racism and systemic discrimination in Canada run deep” and are “built into our institutions, and perpetuate the social and economic disparities that exist in everything from education to health care to housing and employment.”

Blanchet was responding to a question about systemic racism after one of his MPs, Alain Therrien, made a gesture at NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh during Wednesday’s parliamentary proceedings.

Singh, the MP for Burnaby South, would later describe the gesture as a racist brush-off of his concerns about police brutality and discrimination. But he was punished for calling out the gesture by being tossed out of the House of Commons.

Therrien was not present at Thursday’s press conference, and Blanchet attempted to dismiss the gesture as too vague to mean anything specific.

“How could someone interpret, or imagine the way someone looks at somebody else, or a gesture, which nobody seems to remember?” he said. “Who is entitled to say, ‘Oh, he moved his hand in such a way, and this means this or that?'”

Therrien’s gesture was not caught on House of Commons cameras, but Singh said it came when Therrien voted “no” on his motion to study the issue of systemic racism in the RCMP.

“In this moment, when Indigenous people are being killed and brutalized, Black people are being killed and brutalized, in Canada, we have not seen any action,” said Singh on Wednesday. “People are angry, people are frustrated.”

Singh’s motion followed weeks of reports of killings and displays of force by police forces.

A recently released dashcam video of the RCMP’s arrest in March of Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation Chief Allan Adam, for example, showed an Alberta officer slamming his body into Adam at high speed and putting him into a chokehold.

Then there were the police shootings in New Brunswick. Rodney Levi from Metepenagiag Mi’kmaq Nation was killed June 12 after police appeared at a barbecue, a shooting that was less than two weeks after police shot Chantel Moore from Tla-o-qui-aht First Nation following a “wellness check.”

Those came after the death of Regis Korchinski-Paquet in May in Toronto, after police became involved, and the police killing of Stewart Kevin Andrews in Winnipeg in April.

The RCMP says it stands against all forms of racism and discrimination. But RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki has faced calls to resign after she initially said she was “struggling” with the term systemic racism — before saying later in a statement that she should have said it did exist.

Singh’s motion asked MPs to agree that there was systemic racism in the RCMP, and for police to make de-escalation a priority and review its use-of-force tactics. It also would look at the RCMP budget to see if funding can be directed to health care instead.

Blanchet said the Bloc voted against the motion because the party was already supporting a committee’s study of racism in the RCMP and “we can’t come to conclusions ahead of time.”

Carl Meyer / Local Journalism Initiative / Canada's National Observer

Comments