Incumbent Toronto-area Liberal candidate apologizes for ‘deplorable’ comments
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OTTAWA – An incumbent Liberal candidate is apologizing for comments he made in January about a Conservative candidate who had a bounty placed on him by Hong Kong police last December.
The Toronto Association for Democracy in China said in a news release that Liberal candidate Paul Chiang told Chinese-language newspaper Ming Pao at a news conference three months ago that everyone at the event could claim the bounty “if you bring him to Toronto’s Chinese Consulate.”
Joe Tay, a Conservative candidate for Don Valley North, is among six overseas activists targeted by Hong Kong police who announced rewards of HK$1 million, equivalent to about C$180,000, for information leading to their arrests.

Chiang, who is running for re-election in Markham-Unionville, said in a social media post Friday that his comments were “deplorable” and “a complete lapse of judgment on the seriousness of the matter.”
“As a former police officer, I should have known better,” Chiang said in the post. “I sincerely apologize and deeply regret my comments.”
The Canadian Press reached out to Chiang, whose team declined a request for an interview, and to the Liberal party, which has not responded.
“This is shocking. Mr. Chiang openly encouraged people to assist in China interference and transnational repression,” said Cheuk Kwan, co-chair of the Toronto Association for Democracy in China. “Rather than protecting Canadians, he betrayed them and jeopardized their safety.”
Conservative candidate Michael Chong said Liberal Leader Mark Carney must immediately disavow Chiang’s comments and remove Chiang as the candidate for the riding, just north of Toronto.
In a social media post, Chong said it’s “outrageous” that the Liberals “continue to play footsie with foreign interference putting the security of Canadians at risk.”
“This expression of support for the (Chinese Communist Party’s) illegal and unjust bounty on a Canadian citizen is disturbing, particularly to the countless Canadians of Chinese descent who have been targeted and harassed by the communist regime,” Chong said.
Chiang said on social media that he continues to stand with the people of Hong Kong in their fight to “safeguard their human rights and freedoms.”
Meanwhile, a Liberal spokesman confirmed Friday evening that the party dropped its candidate in the Calgary Confederation riding, Thomas Keeper, because of his failure to disclose a stayed domestic assault charge from 2005.
— With files from Ashley Joannou in Vancouver
This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 28, 2025.