The Proud Boys: Small, retrograde and ‘willing to go places and disrupt things’
HALIFAX — Until this week, few Canadians had heard of the Proud Boys. That changed on Canada Day, when five young men in matching black polo shirts disrupted an Indigenous ceremony in Halifax.
That brief, 10-minute confrontation at a statue of Edward Cornwallis — the British general who founded the city and issued a bounty on the scalps of the Mi’kmaq people — has put the military career of each man in doubt. The incident has shone a spotlight on a retrograde group that sprung up last year amid the rise of U.S. President Donald Trump and the many in-your-face, far-right groups that support him.
Will Sommer, a journalist in Washington, D.C., who has followed the small movement, said the group was founded in the U.S. by Gavin McInnes, a Canadian who helped establish Vice Media and is now an outspoken political pundit with an internet talk show and regular stints on Fox News and Canada’s Rebel Media website. (Vice severed ties with McInnes in 2008.)
McInnes has been eager to speak to reporters about the Canada Day incident, saying he plans to travel to Halifax to present military officials with an online petition that describes what happened as a witch hunt.


