Former Vice President of the British Columbia Union Indian Chiefs (UBCIC) wants to run in the social media that shows the rejection of the conservative party’s residence school.
“The candidate of any party is very concerned that such obvious racist opinions can create,” said Bob (Galagame) Chramin for 10 years.
Aaron Gunn made messages between the 2019 and 2021, which local people face a genocide in Canada and said “asked local bands from local bands.”
Gunn now works as a conservative party candidate for the North Island-Powell River.
A post from Gunn “There was no genocide in the X in October 2020. Lie on people and read a book.
More than 150,000 first nations, Métis and Inuit children were forced to participate in residential schools between 1870-1997. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission called the “Cultural Genocide” residential school system in 2015 called the “cultural genocide.”
The Commons House was unanimously passed by recognizing in 2022 As a genocide of Canada’s residential schools. Motion Pope Francis was held after the visit of Canada in July 2022, after describing his residential schools as genocide.
Chamberlin, these comments rejected the “effect of the residential school” and Gunn’s “never represent the interests of the first nations in this riding,” he said.
Terri Teegee, BC Regional Director for the First Nations Assembly, said he thought to take a closer look at the candidates of the Conservative Party and the gun.
“Mr. Gunn, of course, does not read the term genocide,” he said.
“This is really what conservatives can work with the first people in this country, especially those who support this type of view.
A post in x since June 2021 “Residential schools” residential schools, John A. MacDonald was still asked by local groups by local groups in East Ontario, but Hey, let’s put the truth on a good title. “
UBCIC Grand Guide Stewart Phillip, posts “completely flawless and disrespectful and treated, called a sense of compassion against local peoples suffering from a residential school experience.”
“I do not think that this man, federal or provincial or state or this terrible expressions, I do not think it’s any office that allows you to continue.”

Chamberlin, Gunn’s Social Media’s social media said the postsention school is unbelieving.
“If candidates like Aaron Gunn were successful and elected, the first nations are conversations that will continue to control the oppression,” he said.
The conservative party responds
CBC News took several attempts to reach the Gunn for comments, but did not hear back with the publishing time.
In the statement, a campaign spokesman for the Conservative Party, “Aaron Gunn became clear in any attempt to recognize the really terrible events, which are transformed in residential schools and thinking it was simply false.”
The statement came to the statements made in the parliament of the Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre, which admitted the suffering caused by residential schools, called “abuse of violence from the rule of government.”
In the speech, Poilievre has more work and, “I know that Canada has no future without a strong future for the first nations.”
In the statement, spokesman Mr. Gunn, along with great candidates like Hais Ross, Ellis Ross, and all the Canadians are more powerful in the house. “
NDP NDRO-candidate candidate Tanille Tea Tanille Johnston, in a statement to the CBC news, “Conservatives are horrible to see a candidate carrying such divisions and harmful beliefs.”
“I believe that conservatives should think why this type of candidate should think about how they think, but for our federal government for our federal government.”
Conservative That the four candidates fall This week, three of them for controversial comments.
BC Liberal Party The Gunn rejected the application After investigating the Gunn’s comments on social media, work in 2021.
CBC News has reached the Liberal Party for the comment, but did not hear the publishing time.