Poilievre pitches to new immigrants, as Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown attacks him over 2015 niqab ban bill

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Published March 14, 2022 at 7:14 pm

Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown and high-profile Conservative Pierre Poilievre spent Monday battling over a seven-year-old election promise to prohibit face coverings during citizenship ceremonies — a sign of what could be the makings of a tense rivalry between candidates in the Tory leadership race.

Brown, who launched his bid on Sunday, blasted longtimeOttawa-area MP Poilievre over his actions back in 2015 when the party promised to create a “barbaric cultural practices” tip line and require people’s faces to be visible during citizenship oaths.

The attack came as Poilievre spent the past few days meeting with cultural community leaders in the Greater Toronto Area and promising to cut red tape for immigrants wanting to access the necessary licences they need to work in regulated industries.

Poilievre pledged a Conservative government led by him would incentivize provinces to require occupational licensing bodies to decide on an immigrant’s application within 60 days of receiving their paperwork, rather than forcing them to wait for months.

As Poilievre made the pledge, Brown released a statement saying the longtime Ottawa-area MP lacks credibility on any policy that impacts minority communities given his role in the Conservatives’ 2015 election campaign.

It was during that race when the party, then led by former prime minister Stephen Harper, promised to create a tip line for so-called “barbaric cultural practices.”

Poilievre was running for re-election as a candidate at the time and was also a member of Harper’s government when it introduced a bill banning people from wearing face coverings during citizenship ceremonies.

Brown’s campaign says Poilievre hasn’t spoken out against these measures. The MP also has Jenni Byrne on his team, who was the party’s national campaign manager in 2015.

In contrast, Brown, who is the mayor of Brampton, has positioned himself as the contestant who best promotes religious freedoms, including through his opposition of a controversial secularism law in Quebec that prohibits public servants in positions of authority from wearing religious symbols on the job.

A spokesman for Poilievre’s campaign has not yet provided a response to Brown’s statements.

Edmonton MP Tim Uppal, who has been named a co-chair on Poilievre’s campaign, has previously apologized for his role in promoting the niqab ban at the time. He has said the party is still dealing with the fallout from racialized communities from that election campaign.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 14, 2022.

Stephanie Taylor, The Canadian Press

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