Federal Conservative leadership candidate Chris Alexander says he âabsolutely disassociatesâ himself from members of an Edmonton crowd who chanted âlock her upâ in reference to Alberta Premier Rachel Notley outside the provinceâs legislature Saturday.
At the same time, Alexander tells Âéśš´ŤĂ˝ Channel he doesnât think itâs the job of âpoliticians or media to chastise a crowd who is saying something very spontaneously on the basis of real emotion,â adding: âThe anger is real.â
âWeâve got to stop lecturing people on how they should feel and what they should say and start listening to them,â says the former immigration minister who lost his Toronto-area seat in the 2015 election.
Alexander notes that an estimated 100,000 Albertans have lost their jobs due to the downturn in the oil sector. He says the carbon tax, imposed by Notleyâs NDP government with the federal Liberalsâ blessing, will lead to even more job losses.
âLock her upâ was frequently chanted when Hillary Clintonâs name came up at Donald Trump rallies during the U.S. election campaign. Clintonâs use of a private email server during her time as secretary of state was under investigation, but she was not charged with any crime.
Alexander said this âchant that came from south of the borderâ was âunpleasant in every way,â that he was âshockedâ by it and that âwe should never be calling for unconstitutional, illegal approaches to our politics.â
The candidate has been criticized for not intervening to stop the chant. He tells Âéśš´ŤĂ˝ Channel âit took me a while to understand what was going onâ and that he tried to âtake the chant back to âletâs vote her outâ.â
Asked whether he would intervene at future rallies if he hears âlock her up,â Alexander said: âYeah, Iâll be even more energetic than I was this time.â
âPeople acting like idiotsâ: Ambrose
Interim Conservative leader Rona Ambrose told reporters in the House of Commons Monday that the chant was ânot only unoriginal (but) completely inappropriate.â
âI donât know what to say,â said the Alberta MP. âPeople acting like idiots.â
âWe donât lock people up in Canada for bad policy,â she added. âWe vote them out. That is how we live in a democracy.â
Fellow Tory leadership candidates Michael Chong and Deepak Obhrai have also condemned the chants.
Chong, an Ontario MP, said the chanters were urging âundemocratic actionâ that âwould be more at home in a dictatorship.â
âThis has got to stopâ: Obhrai
Obhrai, a Calgary-area MP, told CTVâs Power Play the chant is proof of âintolerance creeping into Canadian politics since Donald Trump came onto the political scene.â
âPeople are expressing (their anger) in a very, very intolerant way and going to the extreme that was emphasized by Donald Trump,â he said.
Obhrai added that it really bothers him that Canadian politicians travel around âgiving lectures on democracyâ and âthen in our own home cannot stand up to that test.â
âWe as politicians have to be thick-skinned,â he said. But when such a line is crossed, according to Obhrai, âyouâve got to stand up and say, âNo, this is not right. This has got to stop.ââ
Obhrai, who immigrated from Tanzania, said he was also concerned by anti-immigrant flyers handed out at the rally.
âIn my 20 years in political life,â he added, âIâve never, never seen this thing happen to this far an extreme.â
With files from The Canadian Press