Tuesday, March 5, 2019

An Attack On The National Soul



It grieves me to resign from a portfolio where I was at work to deliver an important mandate. I must abide by my core values, my ethical responsibilities, constitutional obligations. There can be a cost to acting on one’s principles, but there is a bigger cost to abandoning them.

- Excerpt from the resignation letter of Trudeau cabinet member Jane Philpott

Ethos is a Greek word meaning "character" that is used to describe the guiding beliefs or ideals that characterize a community, nation, or ideology. Canadians like to believe that ours is a nation that embraces fairness, opportunity and, perhaps most importantly, justice.

Unfortunately, given the tact that the Trudeau government is taking to defend itself against the ructions caused by the SNC Lavalin scandal and subsequent departure of two key cabinet members, one can only conclude that Canada's ethos is under attack.

Consider the evolution of Mr. Trudeau's 'explanation' which began after The Globe and Mail released a story alleging that Judy Wilson-Raybould was removed from her position as Justice Minister and Attorney General for refusing to grant a Deferred Prosecution Agreement to SNC-Lavalin. Initially, Trudeau averred that the decision not to prosecute was hers alone, and that she still sat in his cabinet as Verterans Affairs Minister attested to her ongoing contentment. It was at this point she resigned.

Over the last few weeks, the Prime Minister has attempted to change the focus, saying that his government would always stand up for jobs AND the rule of law. Now, the message seems to revolve almost exclusively around jobs and growing the economy. Consider the words of Steven MacKinnon, parliamentary secretary to the minister of Public Services and Procurement yesterday on Power and Politics.

"The government's adopted approach on this is one that has favoured jobs, it's one that has favoured pensioners, supply chains and a major Canadian company - all innocent victims of some corrupt management maybe a decade ago."

"We do have a disagreement here. We absolutely have a disagreement here and I think the current attorney general has said that, look you have to keep assessing the facts as these cases move along," he said. "But the fact is that we have 10,000 Canadians and their families and pensioners and suppliers and others who are not entitled to the same kind relief they would get if they were to work for an SNC-Lavalin competitor in the United States or in the United Kingdom ...

"The disagreement goes to how you see how Canada ought to approach major economic questions like the SNC-Lavalin issue. Do we do it like our OECD partners, do with these deferred prosecution arrangements, that have been widely discussed? Or do we do it with a ... perhaps more rigid approach?
That more rigid approach, of course, is not to engage in political interference, pressure, and honour the rule of law.

If you go to the whole interview, (start at the 1:28 mark) you will see that MacKinnon sharply implies that neither Wilson Raybould nor Philpott are concerned about "people" and "real jobs."

In his campaign to win office, Mr. Trudeau stoked the hopes of all Canadian that things could be better, and that politics would be done in a new way. Once stoked, such hopes demand action. Now that the Prime Minister has clearly been hoist upon the petard of his own lofty rhetoric, he can expect massive anger and massive resistance to this unprecedented attack on the national soul and the not-too-subtle message being sent that principle, integrity and honour must give way to economic imperatives.

6 comments:

  1. Words matter, Lorne. And Mr. Trudeau's words don't match his actions.

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    1. And that, to me, is the crux of the matter, Owen. Blatant hypocrisy is hard to abide.

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  2. .. words also tell the tale.. they leave clues and a clear trail for the observant tracker. 'Tracking' is a fave topic of mine. Thus I follow the trail along Twitter, blogs, MainMedia and here & there into legislation.. Words & clues are found in insult, boast, promise, appraisal, defiance, denial, consideration.. Repetition is its own clue. The vest among us often say it but once and mean it. When words form litany or dogma they usually betray weakness or a grift.

    Here's a contemporary example that immediately tweaked my antenna. On the increasingly partisan national network CTV which also encompasses radio talk shows.. I caught the following on television.. a platform for words was provided by the ever breathless and rehab'd Evan Soloman, who's thin newsy veneer cannot camouflage his partisan word clues

    Christy Clark managed to compress l'affaire Lavalin into something to the effect of 'merely a struggle of big egos around the cabinet table'. Now I don't bother poking the toxic self-partisan spoor or horse shite word salad of such corrupt politicians.. apparently, CTV and Evan Solomon see journalistic gems in the undigested offal of such multi millionaire former 'public servants'

    Switch to Ms Wilson-Reybould invoking the Big House ethics of herself and her forebearers.. Caught in the conundrums passed from Harpervet al to Trudeau et al, she opted for the rock solid legal ground. She was rewarded with abuse from all angles. At this point nobody has admitted how effectively she shielded the Director of Public Prosecutions from similar abuse and vapid insult from the likes of Ms smarty pants Clark of the Site C idiocy among other previous and currently unfolding scandals.

    Yes, words matter.. and words 'talk' .. they tell.. all we have to do is listen and also 'hear' what's missing.. truth, ethics, reality seems in short supply.. but no shortage of hysteria or vapid talking points

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    1. You point is well-taken, Sal. And the final words on this matter are yet to be uttered.

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  3. This seems to be the result where political leadership comes to more closely resemble some Chamber of Commerce. The first sign is when statesmanship and vision fade into obscurity. Was it not Justin Trudeau who, without consulting anyone, proclaimed Canada the first post-national state?

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    1. Indeed he was, Mound. Such a grand view, eh?

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