Activists question Federation of Black Canadians' leadership, ties to Liberals - Action News
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Activists question Federation of Black Canadians' leadership, ties to Liberals

Some black activists in Canada are questioning the ability of the Federation of Black Canadians (FBC) to advocate on their behalf because the organization is being led by a sitting Ontario Supreme Court judge.

Some black Canadians wonder whether a sitting judge can really advocate on their behalf

Justice Donald McLeod says that, as chair of the Federation of Black Canadians, he does not advocate on the organization's behalf. (CBC)

Some black activistsin Canada are questioning the ability of theFederation of Black Canadians (FBC) to advocate on their behalfbecausethe organization is being led by a sitting Ontario court judge.

The organization is also facing questions over its ties to the federal Liberals and claims that meetings with the Trudeau government have left other grassrootsorganizations out in the cold.

The FBC is a national, non-profit organization chaired by Justice Donald McLeodin Toronto. The organization made its official debut at the National Black Canadians Summit in December 2017.

"I have a hard time understanding how someone whose job it is to remain neutral can be the head of an advocacy organization," said Sandy Hudson, co-founder of Black Lives Matter Toronto.

"Especially a national black advocacy organization, when one of the number one things that is facing black people in this country today is our relationship with policing,incarcerationand the justice system."

Activist and journalist Desmond Cole, who has written extensively about racial discriminationin Canada, also said he believes having a sitting judge advocate publicly is ethically problematic.

"I think this kind of behaviour from a sitting Ontario judge is just scandalous," he said. "I don't know what other word to use."

The Ontario Judicial Council statesjudges must be impartial and objective and must avoid both conflicts of interest and any appearance of such conflicts.

"Judges have to be very careful to ensure that there isn't even the hint of a perception that they lack independence,integrityor impartiality," saidDuffConacher, co-founder of Democracy Watch and adjunct professor of law and political studies at theUniversityof Ottawa.

Journalist and activist Desmond Cole questions the membership and function of the Federation of Black Canadians. (CBC)

In an interview with CBC News, McLeodsaid that while he attended Lobby Day events on Parliament Hill in 2017 and 2018, he did not advocateon the federation's behalfbut instead simply sharedinformationabout its work.

"I happened to go so I could talk about the federation, but I didn't go to any of the lobby meetings," he said.

Conacher said McLeod will have to tread carefully when it comes toadvocacy on behalf ofthe federation, particularly concerning matters that come before judges.

"It would be reasonable for people to have the perception that the judge has a bias that aligns with the organization," he said.

McLeodsaid he made sure to follow proper protocols when setting up the organization and chairing it. "There were clearances that I had to get in order for me to make sure that I was not doing something outside of my station as judge," he said.

The Ontario Judicial Council, which investigates complaints made by the members of the public about the conduct of provincially-appointed judges, said it cannot disclose whether a complaint has beenlodged againstMcLeodover his involvement with the federation.

A federation is born

Justice McLeod, who grew up in Toronto's Regent Parkand Scarborough, said he was moved to act after he heard about the shooting death of a pregnant woman he knew of.

He saidhe wasn't thinking at first about creating an organization, but rather about finding ways to address some of the systemic barriersfacedby blackCanadians.

The Federation of Black Canadians is a national, non-profit organization chaired by Justice Donald McLeod in Toronto.

McLeodsaid he reached out to experts in the black community that he knew to draft a working paper outlining the disparities facingblack people in the justice system, the mental heath sectorand education.

"If anything, we were advocating for the fact that black people were harmed ... we were being left in a situation where resources were not puttowardus in order for us to help ourselves," he said.

More than a year later, the Federation of Black Canadians was born. However, its formation caught many black Canadians andgrassroots organizations off-guard.

"Before December, no one I know knew of this organization," said Cole.

Cole said McLeod'slived experience does not make up for the fact that very few community activistswere consulted about the creation, purpose anddirection of the federation.

"[He] explains it away as the fact that he's black and that he has a commitment to the community," he said. "He seems to have been operating this entire time with a certain sense of impunity that I find shocking."

Links to Liberals

The federation has been criticized over its ties to the federal Liberal party. McLeodacknowledges that, early on, he approached Liberal MP MarcoMendicino to talk abouthis paper and its findings.

"He's a politician but he and I [knew] each other when we were both lawyers."

McLeodalso talked about the federation withLiberal MP AhmedHussen before he became immigration minister. Hussen's wife, EbyanFarah, sat on the federation's steering committee,according to its website last week.

"I think it is deeply problematic and unethical that a federation, a non-profit organization, that is lobbying the federalgovernmenthas asteeringcommittee stakeholder relations member who is the spouse of a cabinet minister," said Cole.

Sandy Hudson, co-founder of the Toronto chapter of Black Lives Matter, says the Federation of Black Canadians needs to connect with grassroots organizations if it wants to effect real change. (CBC)

McLeodsaid he also met with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's principal secretary in May 2017, but denies anypolitical connections or leanings towardthe Liberal party.

"To tell you how non-political I am, I didn't even know who [Principal Secretary] Gerald Butts was," he said.

Afterwards,McLeodsaid, Butts suggested federation members meet with Trudeau. That meeting took place inJune 2017 and wasattended by Liberal MPsAhmedHussen, FrankBaylisand CelinaCaesar-Chavannes.

"It had nothing to do with lobbying," saidMcLeod. "We're telling [them] things that they didn't know."

Hudson said she has her own theory onwhy politicians met with federation members, and on the timing of these meetings.

"I have a suspicion that this organization is unofficially linked to the Liberal party ... for the purpose of gathering the new energy around black activism and delivering that energy to the Liberal party during the 2019 election," she said.

"I don't know what they did when they went and met with the immigration minister. What were they saying? Was it in line with what black activists, who are on the ground working on immigration issues and refugee issues ... were saying?

McLeodsaid peoplefrom across the countryflew in for the meeting with Trudeau and various ministers and it wasn't an exclusive gathering."This is not secret information," he said.

According to McLeod,the federation also has reached out to the Ontario PC and NDPparties and the federalConservativeparty has contactedit as well.

McLeodsaid he began the federation with the hope of triggering concrete changes to improve the lives of blacks in Canada, but looking back he can see how his ties to the organization bringinto question his impartiality.

"I can see how the perception could be there," he said. "If I had to do it all over again, I would probably do it differently.I wish I had consulted more."