I’m sorry

I am sorry.

You haven’t seen me in the mainstream media for a while. Not because I was fired or anything. Just because I haven’t submitted anything.

So, right off the top, that’s what I wanted to say to you, the person reading these words: I’m sorry.

I owed you better. I let you down. And – even though I’m just a freelance newspaper columnist – I owed you something really important.

Disclosure.

I won’t bore you with all the details. So: here’s the short version.

I run a political consulting firm. We’ve got staff from every political stripe. We’ve done work for just about every political party, federally and provincially.

This year, we got hired by two different political parties. One of them hired one of our guys to run their war room during the election.

The other political party hired us to do research on extreme racism. Specifically, racists who were running in the election.

That’s fine. We are an opposition research firm, so we do opposition research. We are firm with a reputation for fighting racism and bigotry, and we often get hired to do that.

Here’s the problem. I told my media bosses about the war room work. But I didn’t tell them about the racism research.

We did it for a few weeks. It ended months before the election. Two junior staffers did the work, with little involvement from anyone else.

But we were paid to do the anti-racism research. And I didn’t reveal that to my media editors.

Worse than that: I didn’t reveal it to you, reader. So you could make a decision about the opinions I was offering you. So you could know.

It doesn’t matter that the client didn’t want (and still doesn’t want) their identity revealed. We shouldn’t have taken the work if I couldn’t disclose it to my editors.

And you.

I’m proud of the anti-racism work we do. We’re pretty good at it. But, back in the Spring of this year, I needed to let you know that we were getting paid to do it.

I didn’t. And, for that, I say to my editors, and you:

I’m sorry.


Dear Mr. Scheer

‪During the attempted coup against Mr. Chretien, these were my talking points. Mr. Scheer, you’re welcome. ‬


Daisy Group bomb threat: do you recognize the guy threatening to kill us and the police?

This afternoon at Daisy Group, right after this, one of my staff received a bomb threat.

We evacuated everyone at Daisy, and let our neighbours know, as well.  We waited on the sidewalk on Bloor West. The police came and, as I was going through the building with them, looking for anything that shouldn’t be there, another one of my staff got called by the would-be bomber on his personal cell phone.

The police sergeant encouraged me to talk with this guy, while we taped it.  On the recording, you’ll hear him claim to be a member of the neo-Nazi Soldiers of Odin – but he’s a liar.  The SOO would never claim responsibility for a bomb threat, or make a threat to kill police when he knew they were listening in.  And he didn’t even know the name of the founder of the SOO – and every member knows that.

As you can hear on the tape, however, he knew some details about us, and he sounds determined to cause damage.  It was his demands that were most revealing – that I go on TV and admit that we were paid “foreign actors” (that typically means Jews) – to disrupt the People’s Party campaign.

CBC won’t cover this, of course, because they’re far more interested in depicting the racist PPC as victims, or writing about our personal lives to hurt us, after pretending to be sympathetic. But it’s obvious to us, at least, that a PPC supporter made the threats against us and the police.

And, as a result, this coward showed why – better than we ever could – Daisy Group was right to work to defeat the extremist People’s Party in the election.  Which some people have told us we did.

If this guy’s voice sounds familiar to you – or the odd phrasings he uses (“kleptocracy,” “foreign actors,” “Nuremberg Laws,” etc.) – you can contact me via warren AT daisygroup DOT ca, and I will pass it along to the police officers who are handling this case.  Thanks.

The recording is here:


Does Kaleigh Rogers seem like an honest person to you?

She’s a CBC reporter.  She wrote to me in October, when I was feeling pretty down.

I saw it as a nice note.  Human to human.

At this point, I think I’d be forgiven for thinking this exchange was wholly personal.  Perhaps she had had experience with depression, too, perhaps she was simply being nice.  But she sure wasn’t being a CBC reporter.  I asked her about that.

She was living in New York.  After that exchange, I thought nothing more of it.

Until I heard from former Daisy Group staff that she was calling them, that is. I was a bit stunned by that: had she actually been pretending to be nice to me, so I’d lower my guard? Wasn’t that unethical?

I told her I thought she had engaged in deception. I also said to her: “Anyone looking at [those messages] would feel as I do – that you were not being straight with me.  At all.”

I felt she had breached CBC’s journalistic standards and practices.  I felt she had breached their code of conduct.  But I didn’t make a complaint.

Seeing now the story she has produced – in which she and Andrea Bellemare gratuitously, and without any relationship whatsoever to the story, mentioned that my marriage had broken up (winning her the tweeted support of CBC meat puppets Harry Forestell and Lucy van Oldenbarnev) – I wonder if I should have.

Kaleigh Rogers is an unethical reporter.  Stay away from her (and the others).


Statement by me and Daisy Group

I have been contacted by a CBC reporter who has told me that they have recordings secretly made at my firm in the Spring.  The recordings are about anti-racism work we did.  We’re really proud of that work.

Here’s a summary of what I said to this reporter.

We do not discuss client matters publicly.  It is up to the client to make public the relationship.

But I can say we have proactively reached out to Elections Canada and disclosed everything we did up until June 29, 2019, when our work ended – as the law requires.

I have proudly been exposing and opposing racism for more than 30 years.  Daisy Group has also exposed and opposed racists, anti-Semites, Holocaust deniers, Islamophobes and misogynists for many years.  Many people and organizations seek us out to assist them in opposing hate.

I have proudly been exposing and opposing racism for more than 30 years.  As a political assistant, in 1990, I documented known white supremacists joining Preston Manning’s Reform Party.  In 1993, I documented Kim Campbell’s inadequate response to the presence of actual neo-Nazis in the Canadian Airborne Regiment.  In 2000, as a political advisor, I documented the presence of known racists in Stockwell Day’s Canadian Alliance. 

After lots of research, I concluded none of those leaders were in any way racist.  However, their parties had a problem in those days, which was well-known. 

But the extremism found in the People’s Party of Canada is far worse, and far more pervasive, than anything I experienced before. 

We were, and are, very proud to shine a light on the many extremists found in the People’s Party of Canada.