Speaker silences Poilievre for a day after he accused foreign minister of pandering to Hamas

Speaker Greg Fergus ruled Tuesday that Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre won’t be allowed to speak in the House of Commons for the rest of the day after he refused to withdraw his claim that Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly is pandering to Hamas.

In question period Monday, Poilievre asked Joly to condemn what he called “genocidal chants from hateful mobs” during recent protests over the Israel-Hamas conflict in Gaza. Police have opened investigations into alleged hate speech following some rallies and charges have been laid in some cases.

Joly, reading from a prepared statement, recognized the one-year anniversary of Hamas’s brutal Oct. 7 attack on Israel and said, “We stand with Jewish people.”

WATCH: Speaker calls on Poilievre to withdraw comments  

Speaker rules Poilievre won’t be recognized in the House if he doesn’t withdraw comments about Joly

House of Commons Speaker Greg Fergus rules that if Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre does not withdraw his ‘unparliamentary’ comments about Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly, made during question period on Monday, he will not recognize Poilievre in the House of Commons for the remainder of Tuesday.

Poilievre again asked about the antisemitic chants. Justice Minister Arif Virani responded: “What we stand up against, absolutely, is the amount of hatred that we have seen.”

Poilievre then told the House of Commons Joly should have taken a more definitive stand against the rhetoric heard at these protests.

“I gave the foreign affairs minister two opportunities to condemn the increasingly common and terrifying antisemitic chants we hear in the streets, such as ‘Israel will soon be gone’ and ‘There is only one solution! Intifada, revolution!'” he said.

“Twice she refused to condemn those remarks. She continues to pander to Hamas supporters and the Liberal Party as part of her leadership campaign rather than doing her job.”

A blonde woman speaks into a microphone.
Minister of Foreign Affairs Melanie Joly makes a statement on the one-year anniversary of the Hamas attack on Israel in the Foyer of the House of Commons on Monday, Oct. 7, 2024. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

Joly protested Poilievre’s remarks and Fergus agreed Tuesday that Poilievre was out of line.

In his ruling on the matter, Fergus cited Liberal MP Yvan Baker claiming earlier this year that Poilievre’s Conservatives were somehow linked to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“The Putin wing has taken over the Conservative Party,” Baker said, after the Conservatives voted against a bill dealing with a Canada-Ukraine free trade agreement.

Baker was barred from speaking in the Commons over that incident. Fergus said he must apply the same policy to Poilievre after he linked Joly to “an odious regime” and was unrepentant about it.

“When the leader of the Opposition was himself the subject of unparliamentary language, members of his caucus took great offence,” Fergus said in French. “I am sure members can appreciate that I must do the same in the present circumstances.”

Fergus announced Tuesday that he was lifting the ban on Baker.

“Given other events from earlier today, including sanctions imposed on another member for similar comments, the Chair is now ready to move on and allow the Member for Etobicoke Centre to again participate in debate as of tomorrow, October 9th, 2024,” he said.

Fergus said he is tasked with deciding what is considered unparliamentary language in the chamber and MPs who ignore his authority can have a “corrosive effect on our discussions. This undermines the important work done by the House.”

Fergus said Poilievre is an experienced MP and should know the rules.

“His actions must be exercised within the existing boundaries of parliamentary decorum,” he said.