
Coun. Dan McLean 'sincerely apologizes' for past mistakes after racist videos posted on social media
CBC
In a Facebook post Friday, Calgary Ward 13 Coun. Dan McLean wrote that he is sincerely apologizing for "mistakes in the past" after criticism followed a series of videos posted to social media that purport to involve him participating in racist mocking of Indigenous people.
In the videos posted on social media by an anonymous account, two individuals who appear to be former Alberta justice minister Jonathan Denis and political strategist Craig Chandler are seen, talking on the phone to an unnamed and unpictured person purported to be McLean.
CBC News has not been able to independently verify the authenticity of the videos or a related photo that purports to show McLean sitting at a table with Denis and Chandler.
In the videos, the men perform racist caricatures of Indigenous people, at one point playing a mocking role of an Indigenous woman with an invented vulgar last name.
McLean initially said on Thursday that he had seen the video but had no recollection of the event in a message to CBC News.
But on Friday, McLean posted a video to social media, standing next to Alice Marchand, a First Nations elder whom he called a good friend. In his post, he wrote he had "made mistakes in the past" and that he "sincerely apologized," though he did not address the videos directly.
"Due to recent events that have unfolded on social media, I felt it necessary to release this statement, this video," McLean said in his Facebook video, posted Friday.
"To be just very, very clear, all my life I have always deeply admired and respected the cultures and histories of First Nations people, Métis and Indigenous."
McLean said one of his first girlfriends was Indigenous, adding he had good friends who were also Indigenous.
"I, too, hope for a brighter future, one where politicians, political operatives, media, the Twitterati, maybe quit using religion and culture to divide us," he said.
"When now more than ever, we need to work together towards our path towards reconciliation, a brighter future and prosperity for all of us."
Marchand, who said she is a member of the Okanagan First Nation, called for people to settle their differences in a positive way and thanked McLean for what he had done for her personally.
On Friday, Ward 9 Coun. Gian Carlo-Carra said he didn't think McLean's statements in the video released Friday constituted an apology.
"But before anyone — and particularly a leader — can truly apologize, they must confront and share the truth of why they, or anyone, might engage in such behaviour in the first place," he wrote in a statement. "I call on my colleague to take those steps on his journey towards offering an apology."