The PPC are the party for, and endorsed by, white supremacists. Yet recent columns in Canada’s paper of record have provided them with apparent sympathetic coddling -- with one even suggesting we give them seats in Parliament to assuage them.
The People’s Party of Canada failed in its last attempt to stoke populist sentiment with voters two years ago. Now with a central issue to rally behind, the fledgling party has found a movement ready to support them.
While the leaders attend the English language debate, which Maxime Bernier failed to net an invitation to, the PPC leader will be spending his evening being interviewed by a member of the Plaid Army.
Even in his own streaming live footage, Derek Storie claims the drone was nearly hit by an aircraft.
After the prime minister became the target of a fistful of gravel while leaving a campaign stop, videos have emerged showing known white nationalists in the crowd -- including one working with a local PPC candidate, who we exposed just days prior.
All three major parties have policies in their platforms that would impact hate movements, online hate, and hate crime. Let’s see how they measure up.
From Boogaloo imagery to white power anthems, Shane Marshall is not shy about airing out his extreme beliefs online, even while participating in the federal election.
Just like in the US, Alberta has seen a wave of protesters targeting school boards in opposition to mandatory masking and vaccine clinics.
The hostility of the COVID conspiracy movement is nothing new. Here’s how we got here, and how it may escalate tomorrow.
Gus Stefanis is a longtime fixture on the far-right protest scene, appearing most recently alongside White Lives Matter in Ontario. Now he’s taken the reins of the neo-Nazi Canadian Nationalist Party.
Formed by remnants of the province’s anti-immigration scene, the Patriot Party promises to save Québec from "cultural genocide."
You are more likely to be the victim of a hate crime than be injured in a car crash.