A candidate for the federal Conservatives in the spring election says a supporter received a violent threat after meeting with him—one of several tactics he suspects Beijing may have used to undermine his campaign.
Joe Tay, a former Hong Kong singer and actor turned democracy activist, was running for the Conservatives in the Don Valley North riding of Toronto. He testified before the procedure and House affairs committee (PROC) on Dec. 2 as it studies the topic of foreign interference in elections.
“Transnational repression is real, highly sophisticated, coordinated and totally destructive,” he said, adding that during his campaign he faced “non-stop foreign election interference.”
Tay spoke of being targeted in Chinese-language media and of his staff being followed. A more serious allegation of intimidation involved one of his supporters.
“A lady supporter, who just simply met me for a coffee chat, received a parcel containing a dress splattered with red paint simulating blood, stabbed through the chest, a graphic warning to not support me,” he told the committee.
He also said individuals were going door-to-door in seniors’ apartment buildings to warn the occupants that if they vote for Joe Tay the Chinese consulate would know and cancel their visas to China.
Tay also discussed being warned by the RCMP to stop canvassing door-to-door due to threats.
Tay’s name became more broadly known during the spring campaign when it was reported that former Liberal MP Paul Chiang in early 2025 had suggested Tay be brought to the Chinese consulate to collect a bounty.
“To everyone here, you can claim the $1 million dollar bounty if you bring him [Tay] to Toronto’s Chinese Consulate,” Chiang reportedly said during an ethnic media event in Toronto. HK$1 million is equivalent to around CA$180,000.
Tay said the incident, combined with Carney’s decision not to remove Chiang from the ballot, left him “really concerned” and scared, and he considered ending his campaign. He said he expected Canadian politicians to stand up to the Chinese regime-linked threat to democracy.
“I kept going because I [thought] at least there will be some protection from the system,” he said.
SITE officials said the online campaign included the “inauthentic and coordinated” amplification of content regarding the arrest warrant and bounty against Tay, as well as content questioning his ability to run for office. At the same time SITE saw the “deliberate suppression” of information of search terms relating to Joe Tay on the online platforms used by Chinese speakers.
Tay was running in the riding of Don Valley North, which had been a point of focus of the Foreign Interference Commission.
This included the Chinese consulate issuing “veiled threats” to international Chinese students participating in the vote that their student visas would be revoked and that there would be consequences for their families in China if they didn’t vote for Han Dong.
Dong has denied being aware that the Chinese consulate was backing him during the 2019 nomination race. He didn’t run in the 2025 election.







