“I’m also in favour of public hangings … I think they should bring back the electric chair as well. But again, only if you’re like a million percent positive … that guy is a murderer. A Paul Bernardo, you know what I mean, Charles Manson, people like that, Jeffrey Dahmer … Epsteins, this is what I’m saying—Justin Trudeau,” he said on the podcast while laughing, telling the host, “You like how I threw Trudeau in there too, right?”
The Conservative Party confirmed on April 1 that McKenzie was no longer a candidate. “The comments are clearly unacceptable,” a Conservative campaign spokesperson told The Epoch Times in a statement. “Mr. McKenzie will not be the Conservative candidate.”
McKenzie did not respond to a request for comment. In an April 1 interview with radio station AM800, McKenzie called his removal “disappointing,” and said he was “joking” when referring to Trudeau. He said he stood by his stance on the need for “harsher penalties” for serious criminals.
On the same day, Stefan Marquis, a candidate for the Montreal riding of Laurier-Sainte-Marie, announced on social media platform X he was told that morning he would no longer be a Conservative candidate.
“I was told without further note that ‘certain’ individuals within the party had consulted my recent posts on Twitter-X and deemed these sufficient reason to end our political collaboration,” Marquis said in an April 1 social media
post.
“The call lasted less than a minute. Consequently, I also requested that the party remove any and all public and internal communications linking me to it.”
Marquis said the Party didn’t specify what content it had an issue with, noting they had reviewed his X account before his nomination on March 27. He added that, with its decision, the Party had “cut loose a devoted ally willing to operate in a proven complicated political landscape.”
The Party did not respond to requests for comment on Marquis’ dismissal.
The third candidate disqualified by the Party was Lourence Singh from the B.C. riding of Westminster-Burnaby-Maillardville.
A Conservative campaign spokesperson confirmed to the media on April 1 that Singh had exited the race, but did not provide a reason for the decision. Singh last posted campaign-related content on social media on March 31, as of publication time.
“Mr. Lourence Singh will not be a candidate for the Conservative Party,” said the Party in a one-line statement to The Epoch Times.
Singh did not immediately respond to a request for comment. An online
petition to reinstate Singh for the federal race was launched on April 1, with the former candidate listed as the petition starter. As of publication time, the petition had more than 200 signatures of its 500 goal.
Liberal MP Drops Out Amid Backlash
The exit of the Conservative candidates came a day after Liberal incumbent MP Paul Chiang dropped out of the federal race in the Ontario riding of Markham-Unionville, following backlash over comments he made in January, where he suggested turning in his then-rival, Tory candidate Joe Tay, to China for a bounty.
Tay is a Canadian citizen and one of the democracy activists targeted by Hong Kong authorities, who have issued an international bounty on him and several other activists.
Chiang made the comments to Chinese-language media Ming Pao during an ethnic media event in January, as first
reported by the Toronto Association for Democracy in China.
“To everyone here, you can claim the $1-million-dollar bounty if you bring him to Toronto’s Chinese Consulate,” Chiang reportedly said about Tay, his then-rival in the Markham-Unionville riding.
Chiang
issued an apology after the comments surfaced, calling them “deplorable and a complete lapse of judgement.” Liberal Leader Mark Carney faced calls from both the Conservatives and the NDP to remove Chiang as a candidate, but
rejected them, saying that while Chiang had a “terrible lapse in judgment,” it was a “teachable moment” and he had acknowledged his mistake.
Chiang
announced his exit from the race late on March 31, saying he didn’t “want there to be distractions” during what he called a “uniquely important election with so much at stake for Canadians.”
Federal party candidates can declare their intention to run until April 7. The general election is scheduled for April 28.