torontosun.com 
<https://torontosun.com/news/national/speaker-rota-to-meet-house-leaders-over-honouring-man-who-fought-for-nazis-trudeau>
  


Liberals, Tories join calls for House Speaker Rota to resign over Nazi veteran 
invite


Canadian Press

10–13 minutes

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Liberals, Tories join calls for House Speaker Rota to resign over Nazi veteran 
invite 


Author of the article:



Published Sep 26, 2023  •  Last updated 41 minutes ago  •  3 minute read 

 

Speaker of the House of Commons Anthony Rota is seen in the House of Commons 
Wednesday April 14, 2021 in Ottawa. Photo by Adrian Wyld /THE CANADIAN PRESS 

OTTAWA — House of Commons Speaker Anthony Rota is facing calls to step down 
from across the political spectrum after he invited a man who fought for the 
Nazis to attend a speech by Ukraine’s president.

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Government House leader Karina Gould said Tuesday morning that she believes 
members of Parliament have lost confidence in Rota.

Gould said she “can’t see” how Rota will maintain the confidence of Liberal 
MPs, and it’s time for the Speaker to do the “honourable thing.”

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is also urging Rota to resign, following 
similar calls by the NDP and Bloc Quebecois on Monday.

Rota, whose role it is to be impartial and maintain order in the House of 
Commons, has been facing international scrutiny over the controversy.

On Friday, Rota honoured and recognized Yaroslav Hunka, a veteran of the First 
Ukrainian Division, during a parliamentary address by Ukrainian President 
Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

The voluntary unit was under the command of the Nazis and was also known as the 
Waffen-SS Galicia Division or the SS 14th Waffen Division.

All members of Parliament who were in attendance had stood twice and applauded 
the 98-year-old without knowing the details of his past.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he was expecting important conversations to 
be held when the House leaders for the main federal parties meet with Rota 
later on Monday, but he wouldn’t say if he should resign.

“It’s a good thing that Speaker Rota apologized personally and I’m sure he’s 
reflecting now to ensure the dignity of the House going forward,” Trudeau said 
Tuesday before his cabinet meeting.

“I know that House leaders are going to be meeting later this morning and I’m 
sure they’ll have very important conversations.”

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Prior to the meeting, Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly joined other MPs 
asking for Rota’s resignation.

“What happened on Friday is completely unacceptable,” Joly said on Tuesday. “I 
think the Speaker should listen to the House and step down.”

The Speaker’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

If Rota resigns, parliamentary procedure dictates that the House will cease its 
normal operations in order to elect a new Speaker at the earliest opportunity.

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The Conservatives have said they believe Trudeau is throwing Rota under the bus 
and that the prime minister should take responsibility for the invitation.

The Prime Minister’s Office said it was unaware that Hunka was invited until 
after the address. The Speaker’s office also confirmed it did not share its 
invite list with any other party or group.

The vetting process for visitors to the gallery is for physical security 
threats, not reputational threats, the Speaker’s office said.

Rota apologized to MPs on Monday, saying the decision to invite Hunka was 
entirely his own.

He also met with Poland Ambassador to Canada Witold Dzielski following the 
invite.

In a post on X <https://twitter.com/WitoldDzielski/status/1706487737702809757> 
, formerly known as Twitter, Dzielski said he had a “very open and detailed 
conversation” with Rota and that his understanding is there was no ill intent 
related to the invitation.

“If the mistakes make us wiser and our bond stronger, so be it! Thank you 
Anthony!” Dzielski posted with a photograph of himself shaking hands with Rota.

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Much thx to the Speaker @AnthonyRota 
<https://twitter.com/AnthonyRota?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw>  for a very open and 
detailed conversation on the past Friday recognition of a 14th Waffen Grenadier 
Division SS member in @OurCommons 
<https://twitter.com/OurCommons?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw> . It was not intended. If 
the mistakes make us wiser and our bond stronger, so be it! Thank you Anthony! 
pic.twitter.com/XCqX8HKAfE <https://t.co/XCqX8HKAfE> 

— Witold Dzielski (@WitoldDzielski) September 26, 2023 
<https://twitter.com/WitoldDzielski/status/1706487737702809757?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw>
 

But that’s not good enough for one Polish politician who is participating in a 
general election back home.

Poland’s Education Minister Przemyslaw Czarnek posted on X 
<https://twitter.com/CzarnekP/status/1706569136849981920>  that he’s taken 
steps to possibly extradite Hunka back to Poland.

Justice Minister Arif Virani said no one from the Polish government has 
contacted him regarding the matter.

He added that he can’t comment on anything related to extradition until it 
lands on his desk, because his wading into the issue could jeopardize any 
investigations that may be underway.

“Commenting on an early stages of an extradition process is not appropriate,” 
Virani said Tuesday.

 

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