“Hate puts us all at risk,” the banner reads, before citing the six people who were gunned down Sunday night during evening prayers:

A banner listing the names of the six men killed in a mass shooting at a Quebec City mosque this week was hung from the constituency office of Conservative MP and leadership candidate Kellie Leitch.

This was hung on Kellie Leitch's office overnight in Collingwood @NewsBayshore pic.twitter.com/yHa87dtsIz

Though the banner includes the term "#notmymp," the organizer behind a lawn sign campaign using that hashtag in Leitch’s Simcoe-Grey riding told the Collingwood Connection Tuesday that her group was not responsible.

Leitch has called for immigrants, refugees, and visitors to screened for so-called “anti-Canadian values” and raised eyebrows by lauding the election of Donald Trump last November.

Though she has long denied that the controversial policy is directed at Muslims, fellow Tory leadership rival Michael Chong dismissed it as “dog-whistle politics”and xenophobic.

Leitch not backing down

Leitch told The Globe and Mail’s Laura Stone Tuesday that it is “ridiculous” for anyone try to link her proposal to the attack, arguing her policy could also apply to white supremacists.

Though Leitch’s campaign has been endorsed by two white nationalist groups, she suggested during a previous interview that she was not overly concerned about racists gravitating to her.

“I’m not one [a racist] myself,” she told AM640 in November. “It is not for me to speak about other individuals.”

Statement after mosque attack did not mention Muslims

Like other Tory leadership candidates, Leitch released a statement Monday condemning the shooting, but her remarks notably did not mention that the attack took place in a mosque or that the victims were Muslims.

Colin Walmsley, a University of Oxford student, later took to Twitter with an edited version of Leitch's statement that created a splash on social media.