Your politicians can't call each other what they are now, hey?
So, you know how sometimes the Legislature can get a little… heated? And maybe, just maybe, someone might accuse someone else of being a misogynist, or a bigot, or, you know, transphobic? Well, not anymore in Manitoba, hey. Our Speaker just laid down the law: no more name-calling in the chamber. Seriously. If you call someone a racist or a homophobe, you're risking a reprimand.
### What This Means for Winnipeg
On the one hand, I get it. We all want a bit more decorum. Nobody wants the Legislative Building, which is right there across from Memorial Park, to sound like a schoolyard scrap, hey. But on the other hand, what happens when someone is *actually* saying something that's, you know, racist or transphobic? Are we just supposed to politely ignore it? It feels like we're being asked to tiptoe around real issues, which is not really the Winnipeg way. We're pretty direct here, hey. We say what we mean, even if it's -40°C outside and our words might freeze mid-air.
This isn't just about politicians being nice to each other. It's about how we address big, uncomfortable truths that affect people right here in our neighbourhoods — from the North End to St. Boniface. It's about accountability, and it's about making sure that the voices of our communities are heard, not silenced because someone's worried about breaking a new rule.
Winterpeg. We built a city in the coldest place anyone has any business building a city — and it is genuinely wonderful. Good morning.
The crew on the morning show are definitely going to be talking about this one. Catch it live at mornings.live.