
Regardless of political stripe, MPs say they're fielding vile calls from belligerent constituents
CBC
Two London, Ont.-area MPs from different sides of the aisle say the number of calls staff are fielding from angry, belligerent constituents who berate and bully them has been steadily rising since the pandemic began. And it's peaked in the last number of weeks.
"Since the convoy movement materialized, we've seen an increase in the number of calls that have been just completely unacceptable," said Peter Fragiskatos, a Liberal representing London North Centre. They make up at least half of the calls his staff are fielding right now, he said.
"Not just belligerent, but vile, outright," he said. "We're having people calling our staff terrible things. Inexcusable. Nazis, Communists, traitors because of pandemic restrictions."
If an MP is threatened by a constituent, they can report that to the Parliamentary Protective Service. Fragisktatos has done so a handful of times since the pandemic began, and has also called local police after someone repeatedly tried to break in to his constituency office before Christmas, according to his staff.
These types of calls are happening more at Karen Vecchio's office too.
"Most of the calls that we're getting right now are people who are absolutely just yelling, saying inappropriate things — so much misinformation," said Vecchio, the Conservative MP for Elgin-Middlesex-London.
There's a general mistrust of all politicians, regardless of which party they serve, said Vecchio.
"I think everybody is being brushed with the same brush. That we're all just politicians.
"We have a zero tolerance policy when a constituent calls and issues language that can't be accepted," said Fragiskatos who said his staff have been instructed not to serve anyone who is hateful and inappropriate.
"It's one thing for constituents to call and voice opposition to a particular policy," he said. "That's completely appropriate and necessary in a democracy, for people to embrace criticism of government.
"It's quite another when belligerence is the rule of the day."
Many have pointed to the protesters set up in parts of downtown Ottawa over the past three weeks, and to the people who call MPs' offices spouting unacceptable language as evidence Canada is a divided nation.
Fragiskatos blames the Trump era for ushering in a political climate in Canada that's allowed for the vitriolic rhetoric infiltrating his phone lines.
"I wouldn't want to overstate those divisions. We have very high rates of vaccination, among the highest in the world. There is unity in that sense.

Health Minister Adriana LaGrange is alleging the former CEO of Alberta Health Services was unwilling and unable to implement the government's plan to break up the health authority, became "infatuated" with her internal investigation into private surgical contracts and made "incendiary and inaccurate allegations about political intrigue and impropriety" before she was fired in January.