鶹ýAV

Skip to content

Buffalo Party hit with a defamation notice

The Buffalo Party in Saskatchewan continued to face legal challenges before the election – this time, the Progressive Group for Independent Business Inc.

The Buffalo Party in Saskatchewan continued to face legal challenges before the election – this time, the Progressive Group for Independent Business Inc. – a membership-funded conservative-minded business group in Canada founded in 1992 – issued a defamation notice to the party’s leader, Wade Sira, on Oct.22.

PGIB as a fiscally conservative organization in Canada advocating for smaller governments, lower taxes and governmental accountability across the board.

PGIB’s CEO, Craig Chandler, gave notice of the organization’s intentions to bring an action under the Defamation Act against Sira under section 13 of the Defamation Act, RSA 2000 c.

PGIB had given notice of the lawsuit served as a Statement of Claim from the Calgary-based solicitor and barrister, Jonathan B. Denis.

The defamatory affairs brought about by the Progressive Group of Independent Business Inc. included the words broadcasted by Sira on recent Google reviews about Chandler and PGIB.

PGIB responded, saying the allegations by Sira were false and without merit.

According to the lawsuit, Sira stated online on a Facebook video: “Do not believe everything you have seen in the mainstream media. They are attacking me by using media trolls like Craig Chandler.”

In underlining Sira’s growing distaste with his former allies, the PGIB, he stated “This is a frivolous and vexatious lawsuit (PGIB’s) putting forward to try and discredit the Buffalo Party,” as recorded in an Oct. 20 interview with the Saskatoon Star Phoenix.

Sira also referenced his growing issues with PGIB as “An ugly piece of politics that is not doing any good for the people of Saskatchewan.”

Earlier this month, Sira and Buffalo Party candidate, Constance Maffenbeier, were sued for breach of contract by PGIB over breach of contract issues related to the management of their campaigns. According to the PGIB, contracts signed by both Sira and Maffenbeier on September 21 were in breach once they cancelled their contracts on October 1, despite the completion of thousands of dollars of work before additional PGIB support staff had arrived from Calgary to assist Sira and the Buffalo Party, according to Chris Tan, the Saskatchewan Chair for PGIB.

“These people and this party are unethical,” Tan said. “We wereasked to create a new logo and slogan and we did.Thenwe were told that we had to revert back to the older logo, but were then permitted to add some wordingwe adapted.”

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks