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Windsor

Liberals drop southwestern Ontario candidate over homophobic slur on social media

For the third time within a week, the Ontario Liberal Party has removed an election candidate. On Thursday, Alec Mazurek was dropped from running in Chatham-Kent-Leamingtonover comments he says he made on social media when he was 15.

Alec Mazurek no longer Chatham-Kent-Leamington candidate; Audrey Festeryga now registered to run

Alec Mazurek has been removed as Liberal candidate for the riding of Chatham-Kent-Leamington over comments made previously on social media, the Ontario Liberal Party confirmed Thursday. (Alec Mazurek / Twitter)

The Ontario Liberal Party said Thursday it has removed Alec Mazurek as a provincial election candidate for Chatham-Kent-Leamingtonfollowing claimshe used a homophobic slur multiple times on social media.

Mazurek, 23,later said on Facebook thatthe comments were made when he was 15.They came to light when they were shared by the NDP, and appear to have been posted by Mazurek eight years ago.

It marks the third time within a week that the Liberals have dropped a candidate.

Liberal LeaderSteven Del Ducawas asked about Mazurek's online posts Thursday, which is also the deadline day for candidate nominations for the June 2 election.

"I think it's really important for leaders to take decisive action when candidate behaviour that is irresponsible, that is reckless, that is not what we stand for is dealt with in the most decisive way possible,"Del Ducasaid. "So I will take a look immediately following this event, and if that is the case, he will no longer be a candidate for us."

Shortly after, Del Duca'spress secretarysaidin a statement that Mazurek"has officially been terminated," and won't be representing the Liberals on June 2.

Elections Ontario's website shows former federal Liberal candidate Audrey Festerygahas been registered to run in the riding.

The Facebook posts by Mazurek that were brought to light by the NDPappear to show him using the F-word known as a homophobic slur.

In a statement on his current Facebook page, Mazureksaid the comments "were unacceptable then and unacceptable now, and are not reflective of the values that I hold and champion today,"

"All Ontarians deserve to have a safe community around them, and comments like those make it more difficult to earn that trust. I apologize unequivocally for any harms that they have caused and I will continue to learn from previous mistakes."

Mazurek initially indicated the comments were made when he was 13, but later updated his post to reflect that he would have been 15 at the time.

In saying the comments in question are nearly a decade old, he added: "To put it into context, I was just starting high school. This is not an excuse to minimize the reason that this is an issue, but I would also like to make clear that we're holding a child to the same standards as the adult writing this statement today."

Mazurektold CBC he'snot looking to continuehis campaign independently, andhis name won't be on the ballot June 2.

Mazurek'sousting came a day after the Liberals dropped a candidate for Parry Sound-Muskoka, in the wake ofmedia reports that described a self-published book that details scientifically baseless views on homosexuality.

The day before, the Liberals dropped their candidate in Sault Ste. Marie. aftera media report said the teen participated in online discussions in which people joked about "dying of AIDS." The high school student told local media he did not make those comments.

Windsor Pride Community board head reacts

Colm Holmes, president of the board of Windsor Pride Community, said he was shocked that a vetted candidate would have used that kind of language, but is supportive of the party's decision to remove Mazurekas a candidate.

"Obviously the word carries a lot of weight in our community and is used constantly as a weapon to harm our community," he said.

As for whether it matters if the comments were years old or made when someone was younger, Holmeswho spoke with CBC prior to Mazurek's apology said that everyone undergoes a period of maturing, and the issue is more so how it came to light that harmful language was used, the intent and impact, and whether there is remorse.

"Did they come forward and say that and put together some things that they've been working on with themselves, with working with the community?Have they done anything or is it simply that someone has dug up through their social media profile and found out something that they were trying to keep hidden?" he said.

Liberals aim to run full ticket

The deadline for candidate nominations is2 p.m. ET Thursday, but DelDucasaid he would still try to run with a full ticket.

The party said it would have an update on its roster of candidates soon.

DelDucadidn't comment on how the Liberals vetted their candidates, but said he sees it as an ongoing effort.

"From my perspective, the vetting process never stops," he said.

"We're constantly making sure that we are in touch with our candidates, that we're aware to the best of our ability of what's taking place and what's going on with it."

With files from The Canadian Press and Jason Viau