Why an NDP hopeful is tweeting about '2SLGBTQIA+ community' amid Puerto Vallarta chaos | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: National Post
Author: Rahim Mohamed
Publication Date: February 23, 2026 - 14:24

Stay informed

Why an NDP hopeful is tweeting about '2SLGBTQIA+ community' amid Puerto Vallarta chaos

February 23, 2026

OTTAWA —  NDP leadership hopeful Heather McPherson ruffled some feathers on Sunday evening when she appeared to shoehorn progressive virtue signalling into a social media post addressing the sprialling cartel violence in the Mexican tourist destination of Puerto Vallarta.

“ Many Canadians, especially members of the 2SLGBTQIA+ community, are in Puerto Vallarta, where violence has quickly escalated. A shelter-in-place order is in effect,” wrote McPherson, who’s also an MP for Edmonton, linking the post to a webpage outlining federal travel advisories for Mexico.

McPherson’s post racked up nearly 5,000 replies by Monday morning, most appearing to be critical of her  for putting LGBT Canadians ahead of all Canadian travellers caught in the chaos.

“Honestly, just stop. ‘Many Canadians’ is perfectly adequate,” wrote one critic .

Violence erupted in Puerto Vallarta and the surrounding state of Jalisco after Jalisco-based drug lord Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes was killed in a military raid on Sunday morning. Travellers in the area, including nearly 5,000 Canadians , are being advised to stay where they are amid reports of criminal gangs setting up roadblocks and setting fire to vehicles across the state.

Puerto Vallarta is notably a major global LGBT destination, with economic activity generated by LGBT travellers making up some 40 per cent of its tourism GDP in 2023 . This translates to a whopping $17 billion pesos for the local economy, roughly the equivalent of $1.3 billion Canadian.

Here’s what you need to know about Puerto Vallarta’s connection to the LGBT community.

How did Puerto Vallarta become the ‘gay capital of Mexico’?

Puerto Vallarta first crossed the radar of LGBT travellers in the early 1960s, when American tabloids reported on the clandestine visits of community ally Elizabeth Taylor and paramour Richard Burton to the then quiet coastal fishing village. LGBT tourists and expats would ultimately form a community in an inner-city neighbourhood known as the “Romantic Zone,” near where Taylor owned a home.

The city’s status as the “ gay capital of Mexico ” was cemented in the early 1990s when a police raid of a local gay bar kicked off a civil rights push similar to the Stonewall uprising in New York City’s Greenwich Village.

Edmontonian Murray Billet, who is gay, told National Post that he started vacationing in Puerto Vallarta in the mid-1990s.

“I had some friends that had been down, and they suggested to me, all those years ago, that it would be a wonderful little place,” said Billet.

The Trump bump

Doug Kerr, the executive director of gay rights NGO Dignity Network Canada, says that LGBT Canadians, like other Canadian travellers, are looking to warm-weather destinations outside of the United States amid the provocations of U.S. President Donald Trump.

Kerr said the LGBT-friendly Puerto Vallarta looks especially good next to some of the balmy red states that have flirted with Trumpian culture-war politics.

“From what I’ve seen, the city is an increasingly popular destination for gay Canadians, many of whom are opting to take their vacation time there as opposed to places like Florida,” said Kerr.

Kerr said “thousands and thousands” of LGBT Canadians spend at least part of the year in Puerto Vallarta.

Are cartels targeting the LGBT community?

There’s no evidence so far that cartels are targeting either the LGBT community or LGBT-owned businesses in the Romantic Zone or elsewhere.

Billet, who is currently sheltering in place at his residence in Puerto Vallarta, says that, from what he’s hearing, the cartels are leaving independent “mom and pop shops” alone.

“There certainly haven’t been any targeted incidents,” said Billet. “The queer community is very much amalgamated with the rest of the city and a part of the city’s makeup.”

National Post, with files from the Canadian Press rmohamed@postmedia.com

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Two Winnipeg Jets stars were at the opposite sides of the border Tuesday ahead of the team’s first game back from the Olympic break.
February 25, 2026 - 09:50 | Aaron D’Andrea | Global News - Canada
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has warned of “significant” deficits in her upcoming budget on Thursday, with analysts forecasting a shortfall somewhere around $10 billion. While Smith has made a point of warning voters about the red ink her United Conservative Party is about to spill, however, the projected deficit is hardly out of the ordinary. Alberta, despite its politicians’ tendency for loud proclamations in favour of fiscal restraint, has run budget shortfalls in all but five of its annual budgets over the last 18 years.  The repeated budget gaps underscore the unique...
February 25, 2026 - 07:11 | Jesse Snyder | National Post
A property owner and a demolition contractor in Parry Sound, Ont., have been ordered to pay more than $157,000 after work at an abandoned hospital site damaged habitat used by threatened chimney swifts. Marble Arch Corporation and contractor Adam Watson were convicted under Ontario’s Endangered Species Act for harm done to the birds’ habitat during demolition work in 2020, according to a provincial court bulletin...
February 25, 2026 - 07:00 | National Post | National Post