Twittersphere slams Egale's response on citizenship guide issue
FEDERAL POLITICS / Relevance of lobby group needs to be reconsidered as people organize through social media: activist
Brent Creelman / National / Thursday, March 04, 2010
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Egale executive director Helen Kennedy.
(Nicola Betts photo)
As US gay rights groups have come under fire for ineffective tactics, Canadian queer lobby group Egale is taking heat for its response to news that gay rights were edited out of the new Canadian citizenship guide.

Queer activist Justin Stayshyn mocked Egale's tactics in a Mar 3 tweet: "We're here! We're queer! We're negotiating inclusion in the second printing!"

In a Canadian Press (CP) report on Mar 2, Egale executive director Helen Kennedy was quoted as saying she was "hopeful and optimistic" about her negotiations with Immigration Minister Jason Kenney to get gay rights into the guide in the next printing.

"We're not happy," Kennedy tells Xtra. "But he's told me they're going to fix it. I can't prejudge. I can't second guess. Well, I can, but we're not going to get anywhere by jumping up and down and screaming."

Kennedy says she requested a meeting with Kenney shortly after the guide was released in Nov 2009, when it was clear there was no gay rights content in the document.

The Mar 2 CP report revealed that the minister's office removed gay rights from an early draft of the guide, in the summer of 2009. On Mar 3 in the House of Commons, Kenney denied any personal role, saying "I did not do such a thing."

When asked whether she could still trust Kenney's promise to include gay rights in a reprint, Kennedy said she has to "take him at his word" for the commitment he made to her in December.

"We've been told we're going to be included in the first reprint, which is later this year, and we've been asked for the content. He made a commitment, he told me he made a mistake, he told me it was an oversight.

"Until he phones me and says, 'You know what, we're not going to put it in the reprint.' Well, then obviously I'm going to be jumping up and down. Until then, we're going to be working with his staff to develop the content or at least look at the content that was originally suggested and add to it."

She says she spoke with Kenney's office on Mar 2 and staff assured her that the commitment Kenney made in December still stood.

Kenney's office did not return Xtra's call before publication. (Update: In Question Period on Mar 4, Kenney did not commit to adding gay rights to the document.)

Stayshyn says grassroots action on Twitter and Facebook empowers queer people while Egale's backroom, top-down approach does not.

"We've seen other people responding in a way that I feel is more appropriate: demanding an apology, demanding to know why, demanding answers... the right tone for something like this," says Stayshyn. "Actual anger and outrage.... The relevance of certain organizations needs to be reconsidered, given what our community can do using our own tools."

He notes that more than 4,500 people have organized via a Facebook group calling for Kenney's resignation. CUPE also launched an online petition Mar 4, demanding that the gay rights references be put back in the guide.

"Where's the Egale petition?" asks Stayshyn. "Where's the Egale response to the queer community? I went to the site to look for something, couldn't find it. I went to the Facebook page, couldn't find it."

With the rise of social media, old-school gay lobby groups in the United States have faced criticism because of their slow and conciliatory tactics.

The US Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) came under fire in December when it didn't immediately condemn ABC for cancelling gay singer Adam Lambert's TV appearances.

In February, a groundswell of gay bloggers and activists slammed the Human Rights Campaign, one of the largest US gay rights groups, for its failure to pressure US President Barack Obama over the repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell.

"I would love that kind of groundswell," says Kennedy. "If there was that kind of groundswell in Canada, it would mean people were paying attention. Let's talk about these issues."

"We've been moving forward, thank you very much," says Stayshyn. He points to social media success stories, including the anti-prorogue rallies and stopping Beenie Man from performing in Toronto.

Kennedy says she plans to join Twitter soon. In the meantime, she points to work Egale is doing with queer refugees as a sign of progress at the federal level.

"This government's agenda with respect to queers — we're not even on their radar. Having said that, we've now been asked by the Immigration and Refugee Board to train their adjudicators.

"The relationship has never really been a healthy relationship between us and the Tories. We're not really their constituency. But we are making some inroads in some ways. It's not perfect and there's a lot more to do. Certainly our training of the IRB adjudicators... this is a first and we're excited about it."



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Reader Comments


 
Time for Egale to fold up shop
I've seen way more action on this issue from queer MPs, CUPE and random people on the internet than I have from Egale. Every time I read a weak-kneed statement from Egale in the mainstream media, it makes me embarrassed that this is the only group reporters know to call for comment on gay issues. If Egale doesn't want to advocate on behalf of queers and instead wait for a phone call from an openly homophobic MP, then it's time to close up shop and refer the media to someone else who is willing to challenge the government. Egale is doing more harm than good.
Embarrassed, Toronto Ontario
03/04/10 2:20 PM EST
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Canadians For the Inclusion of LGBTT* Rights
The Canadians For the Inclusion of LGBTT* Rights have one statement to make: We will not be forgotten. Try as you might to hide us from the world, we will exist. Try as you might to take away the right to marry, we will love. try as you might to breed hatred and dissension, we will be unified. Try as you might to silence us, we will speak out. To join the group follow the link! The email addresses to party leaders and Kenney are made available on the Discussions page and a letter template has been created by three activists. http://www.facebook.com/group.php?v=app_2373072738&gid=366487592473#!/group.php?gid=366487592473
Sean Gee, Winnipeg Manitoba
03/04/10 2:51 PM EST
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egale's end is near
I emailed EGALE a few months back to tell them how terrible their website was. I said I realize they must be very hard at work on serious issues, but they could still hire a student for a few hundred bucks to improve and update their website in about a day. Nothing has changed. Yes it's minor, but it's also significant. If they can't even take a few minutes to provide updates here and there about what they are upto, then I will assume they are doing nothing. It's 2010. We still need gay rights groups, but they need to reflect the times. EGALE fails to reflect the times and their organization is beyond weak. Time for a change.
Ryan, Toronto ON
03/04/10 5:32 PM EST
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in EGALE's defense
I too have experienced frustration with some of EGALE's tactics and their handling of certain issues but in their defense I believe that it is important for their to be a LGBT rights group that anti-gay bigots and homophobes in gov't feel comfortable talking to, its much better to have those against at the table and talking then feeling attacked and digging in their heels. Their is definitely room for a more aggressive rights group, there's no reason why we should have just one national LGBT rights group after all and social media protests can be organized by anyone fairly easily, I think EGALE's strength is that those against us will listen to them more easily than to someone always angry and yelling at them though there's room for that sort of approach too, my point being is that we need a variety of approaches to protecting our rights and there is a place for an organization like EGALE too even in this day and age.
Rich, Toronto Ontario
03/04/10 7:06 PM EST
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How do you know?
"we're not going to get anywhere by jumping up and down and screaming". How do you know? This government doesn't really respond to anything else except drama. You have to get your message beyond them, to the public at large.
Randy, Windsor ON
03/05/10 2:51 AM EST
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Ironic
I think it's worth pointing out that there is a supreme irony in the fact that Xtra is decrying the erasure of "gay rights" from the guide, while making no mention whatsoever of the fact that trans equality rights were never included at all. There may not yet have been any major federal legislation passed concerning trans equality and no court declaration of section 15 Charter equality status yet rendered (yet!), but the fact is that there is a significant body of federal and provincial human rights case law confirming that trans people are protected from discrimination in Canada. Yet the erasure of trans people bears no mention in this whole "scandal"? Do trans people who are seeking to immigrate to Canada in order to live in safety not also deserve to be told that they enjoy legal protections in Canada? The ommissions by the government and by Xtra are both scandalous. For shame! Time will tell if Egale Canada (it's not EGALE anymore, for pete's sake critics, get a clue) repeats that same exclusion, just as blithely. My money says they probably won't.
Shannon Blatt, Vancouver BC
03/05/10 4:38 PM EST
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Not really
The reason why this made it into the news recently isn't because gay rights were overlooked, it's because they were specifically removed from a previous draft. That didn't happen with trans rights. It's still unfortunate that trans rights weren't included, but it's not as controversial to overlook something as it is to get caught red-handed deliberately erasing something.
Webster, Toronto Ontario
03/05/10 5:10 PM EST
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How EGALE lost its way
I think EGALE lost its way when Chretien was Prime Minister. They adopted a strategy of cozying up to the Liberal Government. It may have given them access to the government of the day, but it put them in a bad position when the government changed.
Joker, Toronto Ontario
03/05/10 10:28 PM EST
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Hear Helen Kennedy on the CBC
"The Current," of CBC, has an excellent story on this. Well worth hearing: [paragraph break] http://www.cbc.ca/thecurrent/2010/201003/20100305.html [paragraph break] It includes an interview with Helen Kennedy. It was good to hear her speak as to how this omission relates to homophobia that blocks bisexual, gay and lesbian refugees (i.e. "he can't really be gay, he's not effeminate enough"). This said, I was puzzled by her assertion that Canada is a leader in recognizing trans rights - something which, as far as I'm aware, has only legally happened in Nunavut and the Yukon - but which *could* happen in the near future, courtesy of Bill Siksay's private member's bill, assuming we don't have a snap election first.
Amy Fox, Nelson BC
03/06/10 2:20 PM EST
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