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PC candidate compares N.B.’s original 2SLGBTQ+ policy to Indigenous residential schools

October 1, 2024

Sherry Wilson faces calls to withdraw after saying lack of parent oversight made residential schools possible

A photo of two people posing in front of a background that says "Over the Edge"
Wilson, the PC candidate in Albert-Riverview, and Blaine Higgs, the PC leader, posed for a picture over the weekend after they rappelled down a building for a charity event. Higgs said Tuesday that Wilson’s post ‘missed the mark.’ (Radio-Canada)

CBC News: A Progressive Conservative candidate for a seat in the New Brunswick Legislature is facing calls she withdraw from the campaign after she compared protections for 2SLGTBQ+ students to the systematic taking of Indigenous children from their parents to place them in residential schools.

Sherry Wilson said the federal system of forcing tens of thousands of First Nations, Inuit and Métis children into the schools was “only allowed to happen because children enrolled in school were isolated from their parents’ oversight, input and influence.”

She implied there was a parallel between that and the province’s original Policy 713 — which allowed 2SLGBTQ+ students to adopt names and pronouns at school without their parents knowing.

“We cannot afford to repeat the tragic mistakes that destroyed the lives of thousands of Indigenous families,” Wilson, the PC candidate in Albert-Riverview, wrote in the statement posted on social media.

“Therefore I am committed to keeping the parents of minor children aware of, and involved in, their children’s development while they are entrusted to our government schools.”

WATCH ‘It’s dividing this province’: PC candidate’s post sparks outrage:

PC candidate slammed for residential-schools statement
Duration 2:24 Sherry Wilson faces calls to withdraw from election for comparing original 2SLGBTQ+ policy to residential schools.

The post was removed from Wilson’s Facebook page Tuesday morning. 

The PC government changed Policy 713 last year to require parental consent if students under 16 wanted to adopt new names and pronouns consistent with their gender identity.

PC Leader Blaine Higgs has described the issue as parents having the right to know what is happening in their children’s lives, and said at one point last year that “children are being taught to lie to their parents.”

But Higgs said at a campaign stop Tuesday morning that there was no parallel between the “trauma” of residential schools and today’s policy debate and the post “missed the mark.”

“There isn’t a comparison to be made there,” he said.

A Facebook Post from Sherry Wilson PC for Albert-Riverview reads: "This is a day of solemn reflection and shared sorrow for all those affected by the terrible tragedy of Canadian Residential Schools." A photo of a statement follows, which reads: "Statement on Truth and Reconciliation Day Today is Truth & Reconciliation Day, and we must acknowledge the tragic effect that the Canadian Residential School System had on Indigenous parents and children, Between 1831 and 1996, thousands of children from Indigenous communities were placed in government schools, where the stated goal was to "modify the child's existing culture," and bring it into compliance with the government values of the day. Children placed in these schools were isolated from their parents' oversight, and segregated from their traditional values and family culture. According to the Truth & Reconciliation Report, an advisor to the Public Works Minister wrote: "the best course of action would be to make children lead a life different than their parents. Demands for answers... were often dismissed as a ploy by parents with government and school officials positioned as those who knew best." The government of the day actually tried to make the case that parents were harmful to their children, and that government schools needed to change their culture and lifestyle. This horrible tragedy is a stain on Canadian history, but it was only allowed to happen because children enrolled in school were isolated from their parents' oversight, input and influmon. In 1989, UN Declaration of the Rights of the Child wrote this in Article 18, Section 1 "Parents have the primary responsibility for the upbringing and development of the child. The best interests of the child will be their basic concern." That fundamental concept would seem obvious but somehow the Residential School system cast it aside and isolated children from their parenb This must never be allowed to happen again in Canada! Parents are trusted partners, and the primary caregivers in guiding the values that shape their child's identity. We must never put our teachers in the position where they have to hide important parts of a child's development from their own parents! We cannot afford to repeat the tragic mistakes that destroyed the lives of thousands of Indigenous families. Therefore I am committed to keeping the parents of minor children aware of, and involved in, their children's development while they are entrusted to our government schools. Sherry Wilson PC Candidate for Albert-Riverview"
Wilson posted this statement on Facebook on Monday. It appears to have been since taken down. (Sherry Wilson PC for Albert Riverview/Facebook)

Chief Terry Richarson of the Pabineau First Nation urged Higgs to remove Wilson as a PC candidate.

“This woman should not be allowed to run for the Conservative Party of NB,” he wrote in a Facebook post.

“Premier Higgs you need to have this woman withdraw immediately. … Shame on you and shame on your party on this day dedicated to the memory of those children who were killed for their beliefs!!”

Six Wolastoqey chiefs also made that call in a statement issued Tuesday.

Higgs said he would not remove Wilson because she had withdrawn the post.

He said it was not written by anyone with the PC campaign and that the party’s position on residential schools was reflected in his own post on Monday, which spoke of the “deep wounds” inflicted on those who were forced into the system and their descendants.

The PC campaign did not respond to a CBC News request for an interview with Wilson.

Richardson said in an interview that removing the post was “a step” but said Higgs should apologize to Indigenous people and arrange for training for his candidates on the history of residential schools. 

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada called the residential school system “a systematic, government-sponsored attempt to destroy Aboriginal cultures and languages and to assimilate Aboriginal peoples so that they no longer existed as distinct peoples.”

The goal, the commission said, was “cultural genocide.”

A man is wearing a black jacket and a white shirt.
Terry Richardson, chief of Pabineau First Nation, urged Higgs in a Facebook post to remove Wilson as a PC candidate. ( Jacques Poitras/CBC)

Wilson, the minister for mental health and addiction in the PC government, posted the statement on Monday, the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.

It was liked with a heart emoji by another PC candidate, Rob Weir of Riverview.

Tuesday is the deadline for candidates to register with Elections New Brunswick, so removing Wilson as a candidate could leave the PCs without anyone on the ballot in Albert-Riverview.

Liberal Leader Susan Holt also denounced Wilson’s comparison. 

“Minister Wilson’s statement is completely disrespectful and inappropriate,” she said in a statement.

“Clearly it shows her lack of understanding of basic history and is yet another example of this government’s disrespect for First Nations.”

Susan Holt
Liberal Leader Susan Holt called Wilson’s statement ‘completely disrespectful and inappropriate.’ (Pool Camera)

Holt said it was up to Higgs whether Wilson should be dropped as a PC candidate.

“He has certainly kicked people out of his cabinet and caucus when they didn’t agree with him,” she said by email.

Green candidate Megan Mitton called on Wilson to apologize and for Higgs to denounce the statement.

“This is abhorrent, it’s indefensible, and it’s completely wrong,” she said in a post on X.

Wilson not the first

Wilson isn’t the first Progressive Conservative to draw the parallel between policies to protect 2SLGBTQ+ children and the residential school system.

Hampton-Fundy-St. Martins candidate Faytene Grasseschi made the comparison as a Christian conservative activist, before becoming a PC candidate last year.

She told CBC News in a July 2023 interview it was an Indigenous parent who first told her there was a parallel.

“It’s an ideology. It’s a mindset that says the children belong to the government, not the family, not the parents,” she said.

Grasseschi acknowledged the potential consequences of the original Policy 713 weren’t as severe as children being taken hundreds of miles away from their families and losing their Indigenous language and culture.

“In terms of children actually physically being taken away to another — yeah, absolutely,” she said. “But I think the point was it’s an ideology.”

About the Author: Jacques Poitras Provincial Affairs reporter

Jacques Poitras has been CBC’s provincial affairs reporter in New Brunswick since 2000. He grew up in Moncton and covered Parliament in Ottawa for the New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal. He has reported on every New Brunswick election since 1995 and won awards from the Radio Television Digital News Association, the National Newspaper Awards and Amnesty International. He is also the author of five non-fiction books about New Brunswick politics and history.