Tory MP sorry for 'no-good bastards' remark
Opposition MP calls for resignation
Last Updated: Wednesday, November 25, 2009 | 12:10 AM AT
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
External Links
(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window)
Conservative MP Gerald Keddy stands in the House of Commons to read his apology on Tuesday. (CBC)Conservative MP Gerald Keddy is apologizing for referring to some unemployed Haligonians as "no-good bastards."
Keddy, MP for the Nova Scotia riding of South Shore-St. Margaret's, issued a statement Tuesday saying he was sorry for the "insensitive comments."
"In no way did I mean to offend those who have lost their job due to the global recession, nor did I mean to suggest that anyone who is unemployed is not actively looking for employment," he said.
Later Tuesday, Keddy stood in the House of Commons and once again expressed his regret.
"I apologize to anyone who was offended by my remarks," he said.
New Democrat MP Peter Stoffer told CBC News that Keddy should resign from his position as parliamentary secretary to the minister of international trade.
"If I may be completely frank, his comments really, really threw me for a loop," said Stoffer. "They upset me because of the fact that that's not the situation at all.
"I'm glad that he apologized, but the reality is he is a parliamentary secretary … and those types of remarks deserves a resignation. A resignation of his position as PS to the minister."
In an interview with a local newspaper, Keddy suggested that farmers in the province need migrant labourers because unemployed Nova Scotians don't want the work.
"All those no-good bastards sitting on the sidewalk in Halifax that can't get work," Tuesday's Chronicle Herald quotes Keddy as saying.
In his statement, Keddy said what he meant to say is that many small businesses rely on foreign workers due to labour shortages, "and without these valuable workers many of these businesses would suffer."
Rick Smith, a panhandler in Halifax, said people have different reasons for not being able to find work.
"I don't appreciate somebody not knowing me calling me a lazy bum," he said.
Referring to Keddy's statement of "no-good bastards," Smith said, "That's what I think he is."
Disabled man offended
Another panhandler, Fred Downey, said he has schizophrenia and cannot find work.
In Ottawa, Keddy's opponents defended people like Downey.
"He's attacking the homeless, many of whom suffer from mental health issues," said Liberal MP Scott Brison.
"I think the problem with the Conservative Party is that 90 per cent give the other 10 per cent a bad name," Brison said later. "When they actually start talking, when they actually are unmuzzled, they say what's really on their minds.
"This new Conservative Party has a deep vein of meanness to it. It's a party that kicks people when they're down, and instead of helping the vulnerable who need the help, chooses to attack them. And that's the kind of meanness that is very un-Canadian."
Earlier Tuesday, fellow Nova Scotia MP Michael Savage, the federal Liberal human resources critic, called for Keddy to apologize.
Savage said Keddy's comments to the newspaper were particularly offensive given that Tuesday is the 20th anniversary of a Commons resolution to end child poverty.
With files from The Canadian PressShare Tools
Latest Nova Scotia News Headlines
- Voyeurism charges laid in south-end Halifax incidents
- A Dartmouth man has been charged with voyeurism in connection with a series of incidents in Halifax's south end. more »
- Chignecto-Central school board improves math scores
- The Chignecto-Central Regional School Board is boasting improved provincial math exam scores over last year, while students in other school boards are scoring poorly. more »
- 1st witness testifies to seeing Antigonish man stabbed
- A witness testified Wednesday at the second-degree murder trial of Robert Harris Lamb in Pictou that he saw Jonathan Robert Beaton get stabbed — the first of 17 witnesses to do so. more »
- High school students want bottled water ban
- Some high school students are banding together to lobby the Halifax Regional School Board to remove bottled water from all its schools. more »
Top News Headlines
- Tories move to curb 'bogus' refugees
- The Conservative government is poised to change the refugee system yet again in an attempt to deter what it considers "bogus" claimants, CBC News has learned. more »
- Children of immigrants challenged at school, home
- By 2016, foreign-born youth and Canadian-born youth from immigrant families will make up a quarter of the country's population, according to predictions by the Canadian Council on Social Development. As their numbers grow, more attention is being paid to their successes and failures. more »
- 2 NDP MPs back final Commons vote to kill gun registry
- Two NDP MPs broke party ranks to vote with the government in the final House of Commons vote on scrapping the long-gun registry. more »
- B.C. house party trial hears from tearful teens
- Two teenagers cried as they testified at the trial of a B.C. woman who was charged after a teen died while her son was hosting a party at her house in 2008. more »
- Escaped prisoner caught in Dartmouth
- Transit union has not agreed to conciliator
- Voyeurism charges laid in south-end Halifax incidents
- Coyotes kill deer in Lower Sackville backyard
- Transit strike continues as council vetoes arbitration
- Trial begins for Halifax escape artist
- Halifax AG says Transit drivers take too much overtime
- Canadian Tire tests new loyalty program in Nova Scotia
- HMCS Corner Brook collision damage extensive

