Vulgar slur painted across MP Catherine McKenna's office

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Whoever spray-painted a vulgar word across the front window of Catherine McKenna's campaign office overnight has failed in their attempt to chase women out of politics, the Ottawa Centre MP said Thursday.

Staff discovered the word "c--t" scrawled in red letters across a large image of McKenna's face on the front window of the office on Richmond Road, in the Ottawa neighbourhood of Westboro, around 8:45 a.m. Thursday.

The vandalism was reported to police, staff said.

"I don't even have words to describe what kind of person would do this," McKenna told reporters Thursday. "It's the same as the trolls on Twitter. It needs to stop."

McKenna, the environment and climate change minister for the four years leading up to last month's election call, told The Canadian Press last month that the threats and verbal abuse she's experienced since her election in 2015 have moved from online to real life.

When asked Thursday whether the latest incident makes her second-guess her decision to enter politics, McKenna responded with a firm "no."

"In fact, it makes it just so clear why it's so important to go into politics," she said. "Some people clearly want to chase women out of politics — that's not going to make politics any better."

McKenna linked the vulgar graffiti to the recent federal election campaign, which she called "very negative and divisive."

The Ottawa MP was re-elected Monday by more than 15,000 votes, according to Elections Canada. To McKenna, the graffiti is a further sign there's an ongoing need to improve politics in Canada, even now that the campaign is over.

"It's just going to make me re-commit to making it a better place for women [and] for diversity of all sorts."

There was some vandalism to McKenna's signs during the recent federal election campaign, but nothing like this, her office said.

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Other politicians rallied behind McKenna Thursday, including Ontario Premier Doug Ford, who called the vandalism "disgusting."

"There is no place in Canada for hate like this," Ford tweeted. "While we may disagree on matters, we must always respect one another."

"It's horrible. Words can't express how angry I feel that someone would do this," said Coun. Theresa Kavanagh, who serves as Ottawa city council's special liaison on women's issues.

Kavanagh called for the tagging to be treated as a hate crime.

"We can't let it go. We have to make an example of it and come out strongly that this is unacceptable," Kavanagh said.

Ottawa police said unless there is corroborating evidence of a hate crime, the vandalism on McKenna's office would be considered mischief.

A spokesperson said no charges have yet been laid.
 
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We don’t know if the person who spray-painted a vile word on the storefront office window of Catherine McKenna’s election headquarters was trying to “chase women out of politics” as McKenna believes, or whether the slur came from a brainless vandal who thought it would somehow be fun to deface an image of someone’s face. We don’t know if this clown was an angry supporter of another party, or detested the Liberal MP’s views on climate change. It is too early to know his or her motives.

What we do know is that vandalizing any property is wrong, and that using a sexist insult to target a high-profile politician who has faced more than her share of abuse over the past four years is particularly loathsome. McKenna, you’ll recall, has been trolled by social media muttonheads, labelled with sexist nicknames by some opponents, and more recently, felt sufficiently endangered that she had an RCMP security detail with her at some public events.

This has happened to her boss too; remember the bulletproof vest Justin Trudeau was forced to wear in the waning days of the campaign? And it has happened to many others who have stood for public office. Personal abuse, online threats, trashed campaign signs, violent, racist or sexist language. There was the 2017 video in which NDP leader Jagmeet Singh was harassed by a raving woman accusing him of backing sharia law and being “in bed with” the Muslim Brotherhood. More recently, and locally, Nepean MPP Lisa MacLeod faced death threats. The perpetrator pleaded guilty to uttering those threats, and to criminal harassment.

Threats of violence, even implied ones, are wrong, and Canadians must face them down. McKenna has had to courage to do so. She has challenged a media organization over a particularly adolescent slur about her role as climate change minister. And this week, she vowed not to be intimidated by the spray-painted insult on her office window. “It’s just going to make me re-commit to making it a better place for women … for diversity of all sorts,” she told reporters.

If there are glimmers of hope in this craven episode, they come via the quick support McKenna has received in the last 48 hours, even from candidates who ran against her, and even from Ontario Premier Doug Ford. And there is hope in the recognition dawning on political leaders that invective-filled campaigns may feed the impulses of unbalanced people looking for an excuse to indulge in crazy.

It’s a lucky thing for politics that McKenna is “tough,” as she calls herself. But she shouldn’t have to be.
 
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最后编辑:
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最后编辑:
西方人起源于汪达尔人,
所以有vandalism。
 
British English 中, count, can't, cunt, 发音相同。
 
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