Kenney speechwriter said homosexuality is 'socially destructive' and called First Nation an oppressive regime - Action News
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Kenney speechwriter said homosexuality is 'socially destructive' and called First Nation an oppressive regime

Further writings by Alberta Premier Jason Kenney's speechwriter came to light Friday, columns stating that homosexuality was"individually and socially destructive" and characterizing anAlberta First Nation as an "oppressive, collectivist regime."

Government spokesperson said Paul Bunner's views have evolved over time

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney's speechwriter Paul Bunner once defended a column that pondered whether 'gays could be cured' and referred to an Alberta First Nation as an 'oppressive, collectivist regime,' adding that it represented a 'pretty sorry excuse for a culture.' (Mike Symington/CBC)

Further writings by Alberta Premier Jason Kenney's speechwriter came to light Friday, columns stating that homosexuality was"individually and socially destructive" and characterizing anAlberta First Nation as an "oppressive, collectivist regime."

Calls by the Opposition NDP for the firing of Paul Bunner were resisted by Kenney on Thursday after a column from 2013 resurfaced wherein Bunnerdismissedthe "bogus genocide story" of Canada's residential school system and said Indigenous youth could be "ripe recruits" for violent insurgencies.

Multiple other columns and articles written by Bunner, shared with mediaby Alberta's NDP,span a period starting in the late 1990s up until 2016.

Kenney hired Bunner in early 2019. Bunner worked as a speechwriter for former prime minister Stephen Harper from 2006 to 2009.

Harrison Fleming, a spokesperson with the premier's office, said the overwhelming majority of the articles released by the NDP were decades-old.

"As I am sure you can appreciate, societal norms have changed greatly over time. For example, NDP 'saint' Tommy Douglas previously called homosexuality a 'mental illness,'" Fleming said in an email to CBC News. "People'sviews have evolved over decades and that includes Mr. Bunner."

Fleming said the matters addressed in the columns "have long since been settled law."

During a newsconference held Friday, NDP Children's Services critic Rakhi Pancholicalled for Kenney to fire Bunner and issue a public apology.

"Today, we know that Mr. Bunner has a long record of writing racist, sexist, Islamophobicand homophobic articles," Pancholisaid. "The sheer volume of prejudice he has published over the years is stunning."

NDP Children's Services critic Rakhi Pancholi said Alberta's Opposition was continuing to call for Paul Bunner's firing and demand a public apology from Premier Jason Kenney. (CBC News)

On homosexuality

In a column posted in theconservative weekly newsmagazine Alberta Report in August 1997, Bunnerwrote that "AIDS gets more ink than it deserves" and in a subsequent editor's note attempts to pre-empt incoming criticism for a cover story.

"The story is an attempt to figure out why [Ralph Klein's] government seems bent on delivering wards of the state to homosexual households, to summarize the arguments against gay parenting, and to search for some backbone in the ostensible social conservatives in the Tory cabinet and caucus," Bunner wrote on Aug.11, 1997.

That same year, Bunnerwrote that a columnist was correct in his assessment that "100,000 abortions a year in Canada is a social tragedy, that homosexuality is individually and socially destructive."

In 1998, Bunner wrote an editor's note reflecting on criticism theAlberta Reportreceived for a 1993 cover story with the headline "Can gays be cured?"

In 1998, Bunner wrote an editor's note reflecting on criticism the Alberta Report received for a 1993 cover story with the headline 'Can gays be cured?' (Alberta Report)

According to Bunner, that cover story provoked a flood of critical letters and phone calls, while otherslaunched a campaign againstAlberta Report'sadvertisers to boycott the publication.

"The piece placed us about as far out on the 'cutting edge' of journalism as you can get," Bunner writes.

Citing a Newsweek story published in 1998 titled "Can gays convert?", Bunner appearedto celebrate the piece, writing, "If Newsweekis taking our angles, are we becoming mainstream?" and pondering whether then-premier Ralph Klein will notice a "golden opportunity for a thorough debate" on the future of homosexuality in the province.

"When [Klein]notices that the Republican party in the United States is standing firmer against the radical gay agenda than it has for years, and that an increasing number of bright, articulate homosexuals are either abandoning the lifestyle or urging their perpetually angry, dangerously hedonistic friends to tone down the political rhetoric and show a little sexual restraint," Bunner writes, "perhaps Mr. Klein will let voters in on a discussion that for too long has been dominated by lobbyists, academics and journalists, human rights tribunals and the courts."

Pam Rocker is thedirector of Affirming Connections in Calgary, a group that supports inclusive ministries and faith organizations.

Rocker said Bunner's comments were unsettling given his position in the government.

"It's extremely unsettling to know that somebody who is planning what our leader is saying and talking about, and how it's being talked about, [is] somebody who has this history," Rocker said.

On First Nations

In September of 1997, Bunner wrote about the Stoney Nakoda First Nation, writing about a provincial judge's "bold call" for an investigation into the "scandalous political goings-on" at the reserve.

Citing what Bunner refers to as "unsolicited calls" from members of the First Nation and from information provided by "dissidents," Bunner criticizes the First Nation and its leaders.

"A community of people who are willing to give up their personal freedom to an oppressive, collectivist regime is a pretty sorry excuse for a culture. Moreover, it is a perfect recipe for real genocide," he writes.

Two years later, writing about the same First Nation, Bunner refers to its leaders as "corrupt despots" who "keep their subjects ignorant, sickly and poor in order to control them."

Cora Voyageur, a member of theAthabasca Chipewyan First Nation and professor specializing in Indigenous sociology at the University of Calgary, said Bunner's articles revealed a mean-spirited and unhelpful point of view.

"I think that Paul Bunner should be let go. Because what I've read in the various articles that he's authored, there's a trend there," Voyageur said."And it doesn't necessarily show Indigenous people in a good light."

On gender roles and feminism

In 1998, writing about the Eaton's department store chain inAlberta Report,Bunnerlaments recent changes to the store's marketing and corporate image.

"Post-makeover, the new Eaton's men are either light-in-their loafers aesthetes, pathetic cuckolds or stay-at-home choreboys," Bunner writes.

"The women are executive ice queens or wanton nymphs, universally young, sexy, skinny, tough and liberated from the stifling roles of mother and wife. There is no doubt who's on top in the new Eaton's culture: estrogen rules."

In 1998, writing about the Eaton's department store chain in Alberta Report, Bunner laments recent changes to the store's marketing and corporate image. (Alberta Report)

That same year, Bunner expressed his doubts about the efficacy of attempting to recall childhood memories in the field of psychology, partly attributing such methods to feminist ideology.

"The hysteria surrounding child sexual abuse was swamping reason. And feminist ideologues were flooding into the counselling field, their barren hearts bent on overthrowing the patriarchy, whatever the cost," Bunner wrote.

Speaking Thursday and commenting specifically on Bunner's writings on residential schools, Kenney said that column did not reflect or change the policy of the government of Alberta.

Kenney said his government had worked to solidify therelationship between the province and Indigenous communities, investing in projects like the Indigenous Opportunities Corporation.

Voyageur, a residential school survivor, said Bunner's writings were extremely unhelpful.

"I know what went on there. I saw it, I experienced it," Voyageur said.

"To have other people say this didn't ever happen, is I don't even know what to think about it."

With files from Elise von Scheel