A peaceful protest outside an event for Maxime Bernier turned violent Sunday evening as supporters of his People's Party of Canada began to arrive and enter the venue.

A scuffle occurred in the crowd of around 100 about half an hour before the event at Hamilton's Mohawk College was scheduled to start. Two men from opposing sides of the protests were led away in handcuffs by police.

There were a total of four arrests for "breach of the peace," Hamilton police said, and all of those people were later released without conditions.

A large crowd of protesters decrying the event stood outside with signs advocating for immigrant rights and yelling chants denouncing those entering, comparing them to Nazis and neo-Nazis. Supporters of the People's Party — some wearing "Make America Great Again" hats — stood behind police and verbally engaged with some of the protesters for about an hour.

Some protesters attempted to prevent people from entering the building and one video, which is being widely shared among Bernier supporters, shows several protesters, one masked, blocking the path of an elderly woman who was using a walker, yelling at her and her companion.

Dusan Petroski, a member of the PPC who attended the event, said Bernier reminds him of dissidents against the communist regime that was in power in the former Yugoslavia, where he and his family emigrated from 20 years ago as political refugees.

Petroski said Bernier gave up "an opportunity to have a comfy life, be a minister in a future government and take a six-figure income for the rest of his life" to start his own party, come out with unpopular opinions and "represent an idea."

When asked what part of the PPC's platform he likes most, Petroski said: "the part about freedom, personal responsibility and respect — that's the only way you can build a stable society."

Sean Dowling, a protester who showed up to denounce the PPC and its supporters, said he did so to let the far right know that "hatred has no place in Hamilton, and here we celebrate acceptance, diversity, love and peace."

"Hamilton is a city for all people. Everyone is welcome here in Hamilton. The elements that are with Maxime Bernier today are ... all about violence and not being inclusive."

Bernier talks 'personal freedom'

When the event got underway inside, the People's Party leader emerged on stage after Survivor's Rocky III soundtrack song Eye of the Tiger played. He received multiple standing ovations throughout the night for pledging to increase "personal freedoms" for all Canadians.

He was joined onstage by American YouTuber and political commentator Dave Rubin and two PPC candidates. Bernier praised all of his candidates, saying they "are not real politicians ... and that's great. People don't trust politicians anymore."

The four chatted at length about preserving "freedom" from censorship in Canada, their doubts about climate change science, keeping government small and Bernier's plan to repeal the Multiculturalism Act.

They also talked immigration, with Bernier saying the party's plan is "not racist, not anti-immigration and not pro-mass-immigration." The party would drastically reduce immigration to Canada and focus resources on those citizens already in the country, he said.

View photos Justin Mowat/CBC More

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