OTTAWA (Reuters) – The small right-wing People’s Party of Canada (PPC) expelled one of its local officials on Thursday over allegations he threw gravel at Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau earlier this week, a party spokesman said
Trudeau was hit by a handful of gravel on Monday, television images showed, while campaigning in London, Ontario, ahead of the Sept. 20 election. He was making his way back to his campaign bus past a crowd shouting their opposition to COVID-19 vaccines.
London police said they were investigating, but have not announc-ed any charges. PPC spokesman Martin Masse confirmed in an email that Shane Marshall had been removed as president of the PPC’s Elgin-Middlesex-London constituency association. Masse gave no further details. Marshall could not immediately be reached.
People’s Party leader Maxime Bernier a former minister of foreign affairs and industry, founded the populist PPC in 2018 after narrowly losing his bid for the leadership of the main opposition Conservative Party.
In 2019, the PPC won only 1.6% of the national vote and failed to get a seat in parliament, but an Ekos poll this week has the PPC at 9%. Bernier, who calls himself a “limited-government conservative,” has been drawing vocal crowds as he campaigns against pandemic lockdowns and vaccine mandates.
The Liberals canceled an event late last month because of safety concerns linked to anti-vaccine protesters, who continue to show up to heckle at his rallies. Some of the protesters have carried PPC signs.
Around 74% of eligible Canadians are fully vaccinated, but a fourth wave of the coronavirus pandemic is currently building, mostly among the unvaccinated.
Trudeau has introduced vaccine mandates for domestic travel and for his own candidates, while Conserva-tive leader Erin O’Toole and Bernier have opposed them. Polls show a tight race, with the latest Nanos research survey showing Conser-vatives at 32.6% and the Liberals at 30.6%.