Â鶹ÊÓƵ

Skip to content

Invitation withdrawn for ethnic nationalist set to testify at Quebec legislature

QUEBEC — An ethnic nationalist who had been scheduled to testify Thursday before a Quebec legislature committee studying the province's immigration plan was told today he's no longer welcome.
20230927120944-aac26b95713ace830d924654e8f8dc65462ca4c24931900c2a0776b55e72faf4
A vandalized campaign poster for candidate Alexandre Cormier-Denis who was running for the Parti independantiste is seen Tuesday, May 23, 2017 in Montreal. Cormier-Denis, an ethnic nationalist, has been disinvited from appearing before a Quebec legislative committee studying the province's immigration plan, the government house leader's office has confirmed.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Chiasson

QUEBEC — An ethnic nationalist who had been scheduled to testify Thursday before a Quebec legislature committee studying the province's immigration plan was told today he's no longer welcome.

Earlier in the day, the presence of Alexandre Cormier-Denis on the list of witnesses to appear before the committee drew concern from all parties in the legislature.

In videos and articles posted online, Cormier-Denis has suggested that immigration will lead to the "replacement" of the Québécois people, and in one he calls the acceptance of multiculturalism in English Canada "disgusting."

Premier François Legault told reporters this morning that he doesn't think Cormier-Denis belongs at the committee, and the government house leader's office later confirmed that the invitation had been withdrawn.

Monsef Derraji, house leader for the Opposition Liberals, said that while he does not share Cormier-Denis' views, anyone is free to submit a brief to the committee.

Cormier-Denis, who ran unsuccessfully in a 2017 provincial byelection, complained in a social media post today of censorship and said the criticism surrounding his appearance has ignored the substance of his submission to the committee.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 27, 2023. 

The Canadian Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks