O'Toole says he wants to eject Derek Sloan from caucus after donation from white nationalist - Action News
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Politics

O'Toole says he wants to eject Derek Sloan from caucus after donation from white nationalist

Conservative Leader Erin O'Toolesays he plans to expel eastern Ontario MP Derek Sloan from the Conservative caucus after news emergedthat the backbencherreceived a leadership campaign donation from a self-described white nationalist.

Paul Fromm donated $131 to leadership campaign of MP Derek Sloan

Hastings-Lennox and Addington MP Derek Sloan says the Conservative Party also failed to flag white nationalist Paul Fromm's identity when he joined the party and voted in its 2020 leadership race. (Tijana Martin/Canadian Press)

Conservative Leader Erin O'Toolesays he plans to expel eastern Ontario MP Derek Sloan from the Conservative caucus after news emergedthat the backbencherreceived a leadership campaign donation from a self-described white nationalist.

Frederick P. Fromm donated $131 to Sloan in August 2020 while the MP was running for the leadership of the Conservative Party, according to Elections Canada records. That'sthe full name of Paul Fromm, who is widely regarded as a white supremacist although he has rejected the label of "neo-Nazi."

The donation wasfirst reported by PressProgress,a non-profit news website funded by the left-leaning Broadbent Institute.

"Derek Sloan's acceptance of a donation from a well-known white supremacist is far worse than a gross error of judgment or failure of due diligence," O'Toole said in a statement issued Monday evening.

"In accordance with the Reform Act, I have initiated the process to remove Mr. Sloan from the Conservative Party of Canada caucus. I expect this to be done as quickly as possible. Moreover, as leader of Canada's Conservatives, I will not allow Mr. Sloan to run as a candidate for our party."

Fromm, who founded the Canadian Association for Free Expression and Citizens for Foreign Aid Reform,has appeared atfar-right protests, has spoken regularly on the white nationalist radioshow Stormfrontand is the subject of a Hamilton police investigation into claims thathe shared the New Zealand mosque shooter's manifesto onhis organization's website.

In December, anti-hate groups protested after those two groups received COVID-19 reliefmoney from the Canada emergency wage subsidy.

Frommconfirmed in anemailto CBCNews that he made the donation.

"Erin O'Toole['s] bluster and outrage give the lie to his promise to build an 'inclusive'party," Fromm wrote.

Sloan, a social conservative whoplaced last out of four candidates in the leadership race, said he had been unaware of thedonation's source.

In a statement posted to Twitter, he pointed out that his campaign received $1.3 million inover 13,000 separate donations.

"Paul Fromm is a notorious name to some, but not to everyone, and clearly this name, mixed as it was in the midst of thousands of other donations, did not ring any bells to my team," Sloan said.

"Upon learning about what happened, I immediately contacted the Executive Director of the Conservative Party, Janet Dorey, and requested this donation be returned."

In a subsequent statement and Facebook Live video, Sloan said the Conservative Partyaccepteda 10 per cent cut of Fromm's donation. He also said that Fromm was accepted as a member of the party last summer, was mailed a ballotand voted in the party'sleadership race all without raising any red flags.

"They are trying to kick me out of the party for not having some excessive standard of scrutiny that they don't even have themselves," Sloan said in the video. "I am not going to go down without a fight."

Fromm said in an email that he was a member of the party and that he voted for Sloan in the leadership race.

O'Toole's office declined to comment on those allegations, while a spokesperson for the party said its previous statement stands.

News of Fromm's donation came a day after O'Toole released a lengthy statement sayingthere is "no place for the far right" in the party and pushing back at Liberalattempts to link his party to Trump-style politics.

In his statement,O'Toole asserted his own views on such issues as abortion, gay rights and reconciliation with Indigenous people in Canada, while insisting that his party is not beholden to right-wing extremists and hatemongers.

Conservative caucus meeting this week

A vote to expel Sloan could come as early as this week; the Tories are holding a virtual caucus retreat on Thursday and Friday ahead of the return of Parliament on Jan. 25.Under the Reform Act, passed in 2014, an MP can only be removed from caucus through a majority vote of all caucus members.

Sloan sits in the Conservative caucus as MP for the Eastern Ontario riding of HastingsLennox and Addington. Some Conservative MPs reportedlypushed for Sloan's ousterin Mayafter hepublicly questionedwhether Canada's chief public health officer, Dr. Theresa Tam who was born in Hong Kong was working for China.

Ultimately, a backbencherput forward a motioncalling on him to retract his comments. Sloaninsistedthat his question had been "rhetorical."

Sloan also hasattracted controversy for his claim thatthe cause of sexual orientation is"scientifically unclear"and for saying thatthe Liberal government'slegislation to ban conversion therapy the discredited practice of trying to change someone's sexual orientation with counselling wastantamount to legalized "child abuse."

A number of Conservative MPs swiftlyindicated their approval of O'Toole's decision on social media. Eric Duncan, a fellow Eastern Ontario MP who is the first openly gay Conservative MP, was one of them.

"I have had enough too. There is no room for this garbage in our Party. Good riddance," Duncan tweeted.

With files from Catherine Cullen