Monday, December 17, 2007

The Real Scandal

Last November, a nuclear reactor in Chalk River, ON, producing two-thirds of the word’s medical isotopes was forced to shut down by the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission. The Commission, which regulates the industry, discovered that the reactor had been operating for 17 months without a battery-operated starter on the pumps, which left it vulnerable to overheating during a disaster such as an earthquake.

The closure has been felt across the globe, denying hundreds of thousands of patients the access to key medical tests that could determine whether they live or die. Acting to resolve the crisis, parliament invoked an emergency sitting last week and decided to give Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd., the Crown Corporation that operated the reactor, an eighteen month window to install the starter pumps.

The decision was certainly debatable. The government was stuck between a rock and a hard place and had to balance the safety of the Chalk River residents with the medical urgency of restoring the mast production of isotopes. An expert in probability theory would probably feel they took the right decision, but I still wouldn’t want to be living anywhere near Chalk River.

The real scandal though, has little to do with parliamentarians and much to do with the foolish appointees whom they throw into Crown corporations as a gift for many years of service. The Safety Commission told AECL 17 months ago that their reactor needed renovations. Yet the Crown corporation, headed by a past conservative riding association president, did nothing to avoid an inevitable closure that would threaten millions across the planet.

AECL is a nuclear technology Crown Corporation. It has a duty to operate wisely and safely as any accident could have consequences felt across the continent. This is not the place for a puppet, and the current head had luckily submitted his resignation yesterday.

By placing nuclear novices at the head of one of AECL, the government is making a fool of itself. and putting the safety of Canadians at risk.

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Ashamed Canadian

This Globe and Mail cartoon sums up the situation in Bali. Half a century after Lester Pearson's Nobel Peace Prize, Canada is no longer the country it once was on the international stage.



Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Foreign interests helped unseat Clark? Bah...

This story never ends.

Now, we're back in 1983, at the time of the Joe Clarck putch. Why? Because according to Karlheinz Schreiber, part of the money used by Brian Mulroney to transport anti-Clark delegates from Quebec to the PC convention in Winnipeg came from himself; the late Franz Josef Strauss, the chairman of Airbus Industrie; and probably from Mr. Strauss's political party, the Christian Social Union.

Well... big deal...

Regardless of Mr. Scheiber's allegations, that fact is that politics then weren't as transparent as they are now. There was no donor's list and few accountability measures; Money -cash- was always floating around.

This is no longer the case. Lobbyist are now watched very tightly and cash can't move around like it use to. We should applaud this new reality.

Even if it turns out that Karlheinz Schreiber was saying nonsense all through the questionings, he will nevertheless have highlighted the stark contrast between the obscure Ottawa of yesterday which he worked in and the much clearer Ottawa of today.

Saturday, December 8, 2007

An Opposition Government

I try not to show too much bias in my comments, but I'm so incensed by what I've just seen on the Conservative Party website that I feel entitled to give them all the criticism in the world.

Please follow this link, and tell me what you see: http://www.conservative.ca/

Here's what I see:

One small smiling Stephen Harper in the banner and FIVE huge photo-engineered Stéphane Dions.

A headline reading : DION'S YEAR OF HERO-ICS, a sidebar of multimedia negative ads, and two "reality check" articles at the bottom of the page outlining all the bad things Stéphane Dion has done for Canada as Leader of the Opposition.

Finally, a link to the Not A Leader.ca website created by the Conservative Party to warn Canadians about the dangerous Frenchman Dion. The website is complete with Kyoto's Dog Blog, which is so indescribably vicious and unethical that I won't even comment on it.

I'm sorry, but this is no way to lead a country. The website of the governing party should be about the future. It should show Canadians its accomplishments and explain how it will build on them to bring a better future. Yet in this entire website, all we see is the opposition; all we see is Stéphane Dion.

But actually, forget about leading a country. The bottom line is that this is no way to be acting in society.

Let me ask Stephen Harper this question: "Would you be confortable showing Kyoto's DOg Blog to you children?"

I think that says it all.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Shameful NDP Hypocrisy

NDP MP Irene Mathyssen displayed earlier today some of the most disgusting and unscrupulous behaviour that I have ever seen in the House:
Rising on a point of order after Question Period, she informed her colleagues and thousands of Canadians watching her on TV that she had seen pictures of "scantly clad women" appear on the laptop of Conservative MP James Moore. She carried on to state in her carefully rehearsed indignant tone of voice that: “I feel very strongly that this is not only disrespectful of women, but it's disrespectful of this House. It reflects an attitude of objectifying women, and we know that when women and other human beings are objectified and dehumanized, they become the objects of violence and abuse.”

James Moore, visibly stunned, immediately denied these allegations, but his reputation and dignity had already been stained.

A few hours later, once it became clear that the allegations were false and it was revealed that the pictures where actually of Mr. Moore's girlfriend and dog, the NDP had to issue a news release stating that Ms. Mathyssen accepted the explanation and would make a formal statement in the Commons at the earliest opportunity. But regardless of the content of her apology, Mr. Moore's dignity is left severely stained.

If Irene Mathyssen had really seen pictures of "scantly clad women" on James Moore's laptop, she could simply have walked over to his bench (which is only a few feet away from hers) and asked him to remove the images from her line of sight. If that wasn't possible, she could have voiced her concerns to him later in private, or even to the government Whip who would no doubt have been very troubled by the allegation.
But instead, she chose to make her unproven allegation immediately public in the House, knowing full well that it would be seen by thousands of Canadians and hurt the reputation of a hard-working MP.

Coming from a prominent member of the NDP -a party that poses as a defender of morality- I'm totally and utterly disgusted.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Partisanship At Its Best

After sifting through the minutes and recorded proceedings of the Ethics Committee’s questioning of Karlheinz Shreiber today, I can only wonder how our elected officials get away with such stunning partisanship and incompetence. A week after they forced Speaker Peter Miliken to use an archaic Speaker’s Warrant to bring the German-Canadian businessman to testify in Ottawa, they have turned their committee into a televised circus and learnt virtually nothing.

The NDP spent the whole committee trying to tie Schreiber to the Liberals. The Liberals used the same tactics to connect Mulroney to Harper. The Conservatives just tried to distance Harper from this whole affair. And the Bloc, once Jean Charest’s name was mentioned, just, well, kinda lost track.

This didn’t need to be the case. They really could have gotten some answers if they had bothered to ask real questions. But I guess that’s just not how it’s done on Parliament Hill.

Monday, December 3, 2007

Merci Pinchas

Pinchas Zukerman est sans aucun doute l’un des plus grands interprètes de son époque. Violoniste et altiste virtuose, il a atteint les plus hauts sommets de la musique classique et apposé son nom à la courte liste des musiciens éternels. Dix ans après avoir surpris le monde de la musique en acceptant le poste de directeur artistique du Centre National des Arts (CNA), la vie culturelle de la Capitale Nationale a connu une telle transformation qu’il serait grand temps de dire : Merci Pinchas.


Le Centre National des Arts dont le Maestro Zukerman a herité la direction en 1998 était une institution musicale modeste. L’orchestre en residence, l’OCNA, avait un niveau respectable, mais Ottawa n’étant pas une destination favorite des grandes vedettes musicales, la salle de concert Southam se trouvait trop souvent vide.

Dix ans après, grâce au leadership du Maestro, la situation était entièrement renversée. Le CNA jouit aujourd’hui d’une réputation internationale et accueille chaque année un nombre croissant de grands artistes. L’orchestre aussi s’est nettement amélioré sous la baguette de Zukerman et a attiré plusieurs jeunes recrues talentueuses.

Mais l’héritage du Maestro ne s’observe cependant pas en salle de concert; du moins, pas encore. Car sa véritable marque sur l’histoire de notre ville, Zukerman l’a laissée dans le domaine de l’éducation. A son arrivé en 1998, le CNA n’était qu’une salle de spectacle : on y recevait chaque semaine des artistes qui se donnaient en concert pour le public de la ville. Aujourd’hui, cependant, grâce aux nombreux programmes de formation qu’il a introduits, le Centre a aussi assumé un rôle éducatif. En l’espace de quelques années, c’est même devenu l’un des principaux pôles de formation musicale du continent, accueillant des jeunes talents internationaux désireux de travailler avec le légendaire Maestro.

Pinchas Zukerman a mis Ottawa sur la carte du monde musical. Pour cela, il mérite nos plus sincères remerciements.

Friday, November 30, 2007

Schreiber Should Stay

To paraphrase one of the press gallery pundits on Don Newman’s show, “Karlheinz Schreiber is a shady character.”

I mean, here’s a guy who was involved in cash transactions with a former Prime-Minister while working as a lobbyist, who claims to have kept ten thousand pages of registers in Ottawa, Toronto and Switzerland, and who somehow knew while in jail that Prime Minister Harper had met Brian Mulroney at Harrington Lake.

So how much credibility does he carry? Very little. The man has contradicted himself on many occasions while speaking about important matters. And to add to this, it’s clearly in his own interest to create a judicial circus in which his participation is required, thereby halting his extradition to Germany to face criminal charges.

Bearing this in mind, it’s easy to understand why Justice Minister Rob Nicholson is still refusing to block the extradition to Karheinz Schreiber to Germany. If he can testify from Germany anyway, does it even matter in which country he resides?

But unfortunately, things aren’t that easy. A public inquiry has now been called and Schreiber’s presence will do doubt be necessary. Actually, without him, it would be a mere farce. There’s also a parliamentary committee which is investigating and which summoned M. Schreiber as a witness today.

By virtue of their own hard work, the MPs have played in to Karlheinz Schreiber’s plan to stay in Canada. They have a started a process likely to last over a year that will unfortunately require Schreiber’s full participation. But now that this has been decided, its final and we should swallow the pill.

It was a bad idea to stage an inquiry into the business dealings between Mulroney and Schreiber. But it is an ever worse idea to stage that inquiry without the presence of its main witness.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Pearson 3

Après la défaite libérale aux élections générales de 1957, le Premier ministre Louis Saint-Laurent démissionne de ses fonctions et lance une course à la direction du parti. Pearson, depuis longtemps le numéro deux de facto du gouvernement, se porte candidat à sa succession et remporte facilement la course à la chefferie en 1958.

Mais la même année, le Premier ministre conservateur John Diefenbaker, minoritaire aux Communes, décide de dissoudre le parlement et déclencher des élections. Pearson dirige ses troupes avec passion, mais sa campagne est mal organisée et il subit une cuisante défaite électorale aux mains des conservateurs. Malgré tout, il conserve son rôle de chef de parti et reconduit les libéraux aux urnes en 1963 où il parvient à réduire le gouvernement de Diefenbaker à une minorité.

L’année d’après, en 1964, le gouvernement conservateur perd un vote de confiance en chambre en refusant de déployer des missiles nucléaires Bomarc sur sol canadien. Une nouvelle course électorale suit et les libéraux sont élus minoritaires après une campagne promettant `60 jours de décision` et l’appui au programme de missiles Bomarc. Lester Bowles Pearson, chef du Parti Libéral, devient ainsi le 14ème Premier ministre du Canada.

Bien que minoritaire en Chambre, Pearson peut compter sur l’appui du Nouveau Parti Démocratique de Tommy Douglas pour assurer la survie de son gouvernement. Ceci lui permet de mettre en place plusieurs programmes sociaux novateurs, dont le régime de pensions du Canada, le programme canadien de prêts aux étudiants et l’universalité des soins de santé. Pearson introduit aussi une semaine de travail de 40 heures et signe avec les Etats-Unis le Pacte de l’Automobile qui fera baisser le taux de chômage à son plus bas niveau en dix ans. Son gouvernement est est aussi responsable de l adoption du nouveau drapeau Canadien rouge et blanc.

Le bilan exceptionnel de Pearson est assez pour le faire facilement réélire aux élections générales de 1965 où il arrive à deux sièges d’obtenir une majorité aux Communes. Il considère son nouveau résultat électoral comme un vote de confiance du peuple canadien et poursuit donc les mêmes politiques économiques et sociales de son dernier mandat. Partisan d’un plus grand rapprochement entre le Canada et les Etats-Unis, il travaille étroitement avec le Président américain Johnson sur des dossiers communs, refusant toutefois de faire participer des soldats Canadiens à la guerre du Viêt-Nam.

Face à la montée des tensions entre le Canada français et anglais, Pearson décide aussi de la mise en place de la Commission royale d'enquête sur le bilinguisme et le biculturalisme dont les recommandations furent adoptées par son successeur à la tête du pays, Pierre Elliot Trudeau. Pour finir, son deuxième mandat est marqué par la visite au Canada du général de Gualle qui proclame du haut de l’hôtel de ville de Montréal ‘Vive le Québec Libre`. En réponse aux paroles du Général, Pearson affirma que « les Canadiens n’ont besoin d’être libérés. En vérité, des milliers de Canadiens ont donné leur vie durant deux guerres mondiales pour libérer la France et d’autres pays d’Europe ».

Le 14 décembre 1967, Pearson annonce sa décision de se retirer de la politique. Il prend pendant quelques années un poste académique à l’Université Carleton et se consacre à la rédaction de ses mémoires. Le 27 décembre 1972, Lester Bowles Parson s’éteint à son domicile d’Ottawa au terme d’une longue lutte contre le cancer. L’homme qui avait consacré sa vie à son pays laissa derrière lui un Canada bien différent de celui dont il avait hérité.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Pearson 2

Reçu premier sur vingt candidats aux examens d’entrée, il se voit offrir dès son arrivée le poste de premier secrétaire. Il exerce ces fonctions à Ottawa pendant les six prochaines années, avant d’être muté au Haut-commissariat du Canada à Londres où il participe à des conférences internationales portant sur des questions comme le désarmement, le droit international et la Société des nations. Véritable bourreau de travail, il continue de gravir les échelons de la fonction publique et est nommé en 1941 Sous-secrétaire d'État adjoint aux Affaires extérieures. Un an plus tard, il est encore muté, mais cette fois-ci à Washington où il est promu Ministre conseiller à la Légation canadienne, puis, en 1945, Ambassadeur du Canada.

Devenu le principal porte-parole du Canada aux États-Unis, Lester Pearson dirige la délégation canadienne dans plusieurs conférences décisives dont la Conférence de Bretton Woods qui décida de la création de la Banque Mondiale et du FMI et la Conférence de San Francisco qui donna naissance aux Nations-Unies. Maître du compromis, il est apprecié aussi bien par les Américains que par les Soviétiques et devient vite le médiateur préféré des grandes puissances mondiales, taillant ainsi pour le Canada une place de choix au concert des nations.

En 1948, ayant atteint le sommet de la fonction publique, Pearson ne peut plus progresser dans sa carrière sans faire le saut en politique. Le Premier ministre MacKenzie King décide donc de lui offrir une place dans son Cabinet comme Ministre des Affaires étrangères, à condition bien sûr qu’il accepte de se présenter sous la bannière libérale aux élections générales. Pearson n’avait jamais eu un grand intérêt pour la politique, mais se disant satisfait du bilan des précédents gouvernments libéraux, il accepte l’offre du Premier ministre et prend sa place à la table du Cabinet le jour même. Une victoire électorale un mois plus tard dans le comté d’Algoma East donne à sa position la légitimité du peuple.

En tant que ministre élu, Pearson n’est plus limité par la neutralité de la fonction publique et participe directement à l’élaboration de la politique étrangère canadienne. Il défend une vision du rôle international du Canada fortement inspirée par son expérience diplomatique,voyant le pays comme un médiateur entre les Américains, Européens et Soviétiques. Bien que sa présence soit plus souvent nécessaire en Chambre qu’à l’étranger, Pearson reste très actif dans le monde diplomatique et voyage souvent à New York pour représenter le Canada aux Nations Unies.

En 1952, Pearson est élu président de l'Assemblée générale des Nations Unies où il travaille à la résolution du conflit coréen. Il conserve toutefois ses fonctions de ministre des Affaires étrangères et, très admiré au pays, il est souvent chargé de «vendre» à la population les politiques les moins populaires de son gouvernement.

En 1956, le Royaume-Uni, la France et Israël lancent une opération militaire contre l’Egypte en réponse à la nationalisation du Canal de Suez par le gouvernement de Nasser. L’Union Soviétique alliée à Nasser menace alors l’Europe de frappes nucléaires, et l’OTAN lui rapelle que sa riposte serait elle aussi nucléaire. Les Etats-Unis parviennent à faire reculer les envahisseurs en lançant une attaque monétaire contre la livre Sterling, mais la paix reste fragile. L’assemblée générale des Nations-Unies se réunit alors en session extraordinaire et Pearson propose la mise en place d’une force internationale neutre pour maintenir la paix pendant le retrait des combattants. La proposition est reçue par l’assemblée, et avec le consentement de Nasser, une force militaire multinationale de maintien de la paix est rassemblée sous le commandement de militaires canadiens. Les efforts de Pearson lui valent le prix Nobel de la paix qu’il reçut un an plus tard en 1957. Le comité de sélection affirma qu’il avait « sauvé le monde ».

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Série Pearson

Pour mon examen final de mon cours de citoyenneté, je dois rédiger une biographie d'un individu ayant oeuvré toute sa vie pour une cause honorable. On avait le choix entre les Nelson Mandela, David Suzuki et Bono, mais j'ai préférer choisir l'un des plus grands Canadiens de l'histoire, Lester B Pearson.

Je commence alors sur ce blog une série Pearson; chaque série traitera d'une période de sa vie.

Aujourd'hui, c'est les débuts de l'homme, sa vie avant les affaires étrangères. Comme vous savez, ce n'est que mon premier brouillon; soyez donc SVP indulgents.


Lester Bowles Pearson est né 23 avril 1897 dans le petit village de Newton Brook au nord de Toronto. Issu d’un milieu modeste mais confortable, il jouit d’une enfance heureuse et agréable qui le mène aux quatre coins de l’Ontario rural grâce à la profession de son père, pasteur méthodiste. Tout aussi charmant que brillant, le jeune Pearson se distingue rapidement de ses pairs et est reçu à l’age 16 ans par l’Université de Toronto pour y préparer un baccalauréat général.

Sa première année universitaire se conclut de façon plus que satisfaisante, mais en 1915, il décide d’interrompre ses études a mi-chemin pour prendre part à l’effort de guerre en tant qu’aviateur dans le Royal Flying Corps. Arrivé en Europe, il suit un cours de pilotage de deux ans dans la ville d’Oxford; mais aussitôt ses galons obtenus que son monoplace capricieux s’écrase misérablement sur le sol anglais, ne laissant son aviateur indemne que par miracle. Quelques jours plus tard, dans les rues de Londres, c’était au tour d’un bus aveuglé par le <> de le heurter de plein-fouêt, l’envoyant cette fois ci directement aux pays des merveilles. Les médecins le jugèrent inapte à reprendre le combat et le renvoyèrent terminer sa guerre au Canada.

De retour à Toronto, il reprend ses cours universitaires et obtient son diplôme en 1919. Mais contre toute attente, le brillant jeune homme décide alors de quitter le pays pour prendre un poste dans un abattoir de Chicago dirigé par son oncle. Il y passera trois ans, mais finit par décider qu’un travail manuel dans un abattoir de la Chicago des années 1920 n’était pas ce qu’il cherchait. Prônant plutôt la voie académique, il soumet sa candidature au programme de maîtrise de l’Université d’Oxford qui, visiblement impressionnée, lui offre une bourse d’études pour une prestigieuse maîtrise en histoire.

Pendant son séjour en Angleterre, Pearson se distingue non seulement pour ses prouesses académiques, mais aussi pour ses talents sportifs qui lui valent notamment une place sur l’équipe olympique de hockey sur glace du Royaume-Uni. Avec elle, il passera une bonne partie de ces hivers à traverser l’Europe, défendant avec vigueur et passion la grandeur de l’empire britannique.

De retour au Canada, Pearson enseigne pendant quelques années à l’Université de Toronto avant de se joindre au tout nouveau Ministère des affaires étrangères du Canada.

Monday, November 19, 2007

More Senate

In this article entitled A modest proposal for Senate reform: jury duty, Globe and Mail columnist Harry Koza suggests that we put in place Senate Duty. Like Jury Duty, Koza’s proposal for Senate reform would involve adults Canadian citizens selected randomly who would serve three year terms on the Senate to keep the House in check.

Surprisingly, this idea has been quite well received by those who see it as a way of getting rid of the unaccountable class of senators while avoiding a new set of elections. It’s understandable why one could find such a proposal quite tempting. Nevertheless, after quick reflection, it’s pretty obvious that this proposal just doesn’t cut it.

The real problem is that being a Senator requires expertise. Although we like to think that our Senators spend their days reading and playing chequers, they’re actually quite busy people with quite difficult jobs. They have to serve on Senate committees, redraft legislation, debate bill amendments and ultimately decide whether to make bills into law. This type of work isn’t for the average Joe. Harry Koza suggests an introductory course and a mandatory reading list. I suggest 20 years in the House of Commons.

And one more quick thing: The House of Commons represents the Canadian population. The members of the House of Commons draft bills that represent the desires of their constituents and of the Canadian public. The Senate does not represent the Canadian population. It is rather comprised of imminent individuals who are more knowledgeable than the average Joe and whose knowledge can keep the average Joe from doing anything really crazy. With Senate Duty, we’re just creating a second House of Commons which will be representative but no particularly imminent or knowledgeable.

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Consistency

I just want to come back to the controversy that arose after women were allowed to vote veiled in the Quebec by-elections. Initially, there was a consensus among political parties that the law should be changed to ban people from voting with their faces covered, but the Liberals are threatening to reverse their position.

I certainly hope they do, because a measure banning women from voting veiled would be an extremely discriminatory measure.

In the last election which was held in the middle of January, tens of thousands of senior Canadians spending the winter in the southern US voted by mail-in ballot. This, simply required them to fill of a form downloadable off the internet and mail it back to Canada before Janary 6th. There was no personal contact required between them and any electoral officers.

Obviously, no leader would be crazy enough to stop the snowbids from voting from the Southern US. That's just fine. But lease then, don't ban women from voted veiled because they don't show their full identity.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

A Million Dollar Drama

The final cost for the Gomery inquiry which looked into the sponsorship scandal came up to around 80 million dollars. That’s the equivalent of around 50 MRI machines.

The conclusions: some possibly high placed members of the Liberal party took part in criminal activities. The heads of some Quebec ad agencies should face criminal charges.

I think you’d agree with me that 80 million dollars was a lot of money to spend to put a few people in jail and to confirm that some members of the Liberal Party are corrupt. We could have accomplished the same thing with a quick RCM investigation and some common sense. Really, I’d have preferred the MRIs.

The real effect of this eighty million dollar inquiry was to throw the Liberal Party out of power.

It should therefore come as no surprise that ever since the Globe and Mail reopened the Mulroney-Schreiber affair by publishing new information, opposition parties have been demanding a new public inquiry to investigate into the dealings of the two men. Prime Minister Harper initially resisted against their demands, but his hand was forced when Mulroney himself demanded an inquiry.

So let us brace ourselves for a new million dollar Shakespearean drama which will probably send Karlheinz Shreiber back to Germany and conclude that Brian Mulroney was sometimes on the wrong side of morality.

Oh yeah, I forgot: it might also make Stéphane Dion Prime Minister.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Senate Reform: A Royal Waste of Time

There’s unanimous agreement in this country that the Canadian Senate is a democratic joke. I mean, what could be more undemocratic than a body composed of Prime Ministerial nominees with the power to block legislation. A body of irremovable and therefore unaccountable individuals with a virtually lifelong mandate. To put it squarely, it’s archaic.

But that doesn’t mean it should change.

The role of the senate is enshrined in the original 1867 Constitution. For that reason, any changes to framework of the institution would require a constitutional amendment which would take years of negotiations and still pose little chance of success. It would Meech and Charlettown all over again.

A much better plan would be to leave the Senate untouched and let it continue its role of absorbing “expired” MPs and friends of the Prime Minister. Though spending taxpayer’s money on the salaries and expenses of 100 unaccountable officials may be hard to swallow, the reality is that abolishing the Upper House would cost much more. The Senators harm no one and often even improve legislation considerably. So while they may be unelected and unaccountable, let’s just pay their salaries and move on to other issues.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Hypocrisy

Out of twenty prominent economists polled by the Globe and Mail about the most recent GST cut, eighteen said it was bad policy. The Globe agreed and launched its own crusade against the cut with successive, cutting editorials.

At around the same time, Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion let slip to a reporter that his party might consider raising the GST back to 6% to finance an income tax cut. This, economists agreed, was good policy.

Waiting for the Globe’s reaction to Dion’s proposition, one would have guessed that it would receive the paper’s energetic endorsement. What could be better for a newspaper that calls itself opinion shaping than a national party leader borrowing its ideas?

But in the space of a day, the increase the Globe had been yearning for became bad politics. In the most hypocritical fashion, the paper shifted from attacking the cut to attacking Dion for wanting to reverse it. Suddenly, Dion was a naïve junior party leader and Harper once again the admired Machiavellian chess master; the real leader.

Newspapers preach political courage and good policy, but in the end, they choose to endorse leaders based on their capacity at reading public opinion rather than their willingness to do the right thing.

Friday, November 9, 2007

Public inquiry?

Less than a week after he dismissed opposition calls for a Public Inquiry into alleged tax evasion involving former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, Stephen Harper has made a complete u-turn on the issue and announced he would appoint an independent third party to review the allegations. In a role similar to that played by Bob Rae a few years ago regarding the Air India disaster, the independent reviewer will be in charge of collecting available information and determining the need for a Public Inquiry.

Nobody knows what triggered this sudden change of course in PM Harper’s strategy. It was only a week ago that the Conservatives were accusing Liberals of irresponsibility and disrespect for demanding an inquiry into the dealing of a former Prime Minister. And now, as Harper told the press today, those same Conservative Ministers who stood up for Mulroney all of last week will be prohibited from having any contact with him until the matter is cleared.

In the short term, he’s pulled it off quite nicely. People seem ready to forgive him for the change or course, and the announcement also nicely overshadowed Stéphane Dion’s first major policy announcement on poverty.

Nevertheless, this inquiry still poses many significant risks to the party.

For a start, let’s remember that the Conservative party is only a few years old. Though electoral victory has dulled them significantly, still harbours two distinct groups: the old PCs and old Reform. For PCs, Brian Mulroney is still very much a spiritual leader and friend. He worked with many of the current Ministers and Senate Members (including Justice Minister Rob Nicholson and Government Leader in the Senate Marjorie LeBreton. LeBreton was known for being a good friend of Mulroney, and now, as a member of the Conservative Caucus, is forbidden to speak to him.

Another danger for Harper is simply the nature of these public investigations. History has shown that they tend to lead lives of their own, typically ignoring the desired of the PM in office. Unlike the Manley panel where the recommendations are made solely to the PM and can therefore be modified by him for practicality. With this inquiry, he’s build himself a loose cannon whose direction of fire he won’t be able to predict.

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

A la défense du multiculturalisme

Le 2 mars 2006, la Cour Suprème du Canada a renversé une décision de la Cour d’appel du Québec en accordant au jeune Gurbaj Singh Multani le droit de porter à l'école le kirpan, un poignard symbolique dans la religion sikhe. Mettant en opposition plusieurs principes chers à la société, cette résolution a fournie l’étincelle pour le vaste mouvement de questionnement qui anime aujourd’hui la société canadienne et qui pousse beaucoup de gens à remettre en question la valeur du multiculturalisme.

Au Québec, où le débat fait comme d’habitude le plus de fracas, les éminents philosophes Gérard Bouchard et Charles Taylor ont été mis à la tête d’une commission chargée d’étudier la question des accommodements raisonnables. Mais comme l’est trop souvent le cas dans les commissions publiques, les médias ont rapidement fait de ce débat un enjeu hautement émotionnel et ouvert la voie à un projet de loi péquiste qui enlèverait des droits démocratiques aux immigrants n’ayant pas appris le français trois ans après leur arrivée.

Dans l’ouest, on sent aussi d’importants remous. En septembre dernier, un animateur radio de Vancouver a causé une controverse pour avoir affirmé à l’égard des nouveaux immigrants, « If you choose to come to a place like Canada, then shut up and fit in ». Et pour finir, il y a ce sondage par Internet du Globe and Mail où une grande majorité de répondants se sont prononcés contre le multiculturalisme.

Si on laisse de coté les diatribes émotionnels, deux choix bien distincts se présentent à la société canadienne : de l’égalité ou de l’équité. L’intégrisme, modèle d’égalité, tente de créer une société homogène, égale et juste. Le multiculturalisme, modèle d’équité, tente lui de trouver des compromis entre des intérêts divergents en prenant la loi comme un principe générale pouvant être modifié dans certaines circonstances. Quel modèle devrions nous prôner? A vous de choisir. Pour ma part, le multiculturalisme m’apparaît comme le seul choix réaliste compte tenu de l’incroyable diversité de notre pays. Et si ça peut vous donner confiance, le grand Aristote a dit lui même; « le juste et l’équitable sont bon, mais l'équitable est le meilleur des deux. ».

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Disgrace

Defense Minister Peter MacKay has been struggling for the last two weeks with his NATO partners to secure helicopters to transport Canadian troops in Kandahar.

You'd think that it would be a relatively straighforward thing to find. After all, there was unanimous consent from NATO countries to undertake this mission into Afghanistan, and a few pilots and helicopters are hardly what you would call a big commitment.

Yet after two NATO meetings, it appears that Canada will have to rent from the Russians. Both the French and the Germans armies possessed exactly the right equipment, but it was just... impossible.

You know, I find this absolutely scandalous. I mean here are two countries who each have armies among the largest in the world, and they can't even lend us a few helicopters. The majority of Canadian deaths in Kandahar are due to roadside bombs, a threat that could be overcome with helicopter transport. But that just isn't enough.

When the Europeans needed help in the two world wars, Canada was there from day one with hundreds of thousands of men. Yet when Canada needs help in Kandahar, a few helicopters are too much to ask for.

Maybe Merkel and Sarkozy should stop parading around the world as the defenders of morality and human rights and help the allies who fought twice for democracy in Europe.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Time For Clarity

Ever since the PQ first took power in 1976, we have seen a constant pattern in Quebec politics: the separatist PQ demands more powers from the federal government and the federalist Liberals attempt to appease “soft” nationalists by embracing the weakest demands. This is how a correction of the fiscal imbalance and the limitation of the federal spending power, two recent examples among many, have come to be unanimously demanded by the Quebec National Assembly.

Usually, the federal government ends up giving in. It can often take a few years, but as Stephen Harper has demonstrated, the potential vote gains in Quebec are usually enough to persuade Prime Ministers accept the province’s ever increasing demands.

This was all fine in Levesque era when PQ was really only trying to restore equity and protect the French language; but now, we’re into constitutions and citizenship.

Both the ADQ and the PQ, who together hold a majority in the National Assembly, want Quebec to possess its own constitution, and earlier this week, PQ leader Pauline Marois outlined her plans for a Quebec citizenship based partly on knowledge of French.

The federal government needs to draw the line once and for all. It shouldn’t set out to crush Quebecois pride, but clearly define which demands are acceptable within the realms of the Canadian federation and which would require full separation.

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Multiculturalisme

Depuis l’ouverture de la commission Bouchard-Taylor sur les accomodements raisonnables, la guerre ouverte est déclarée par les Quebecois au multiculturalisme Canadien. Celui-ci s’opposerait au désir des Québecois de former une société laïque et inclusive fondée sur la primauté du français dans la province.

Le multiculturalisme a bien ses défauts, et je vois comment cette vision d’un Quebec laïc et francophone pourrait plaire à beaucoup de citoyens. Cependant, il serait d’abord judicieux de jeter un coûp d’oeuil aux pays où cette vision a été mise en pratique.

Pour ne pas trop compliquer, prenons simplement les Etats-Unis et la France.

Aux Etats-Unis, pays du melting-pot, la soupe est loin d’être diluée! L’état est divisé entre les evangeliste qui tentent de convertir les non-adeptes pour preparer le second avenèment du christ, et les laiques militants comme les employes municipaux de la ville de Boston qui ont renommé le traditionel « sapin de noel » en « sapin des fetes ». Et en ce qui concerne l’intégration, le tableau est encore plus norci. J’ai conversé l’été passé avec un jeune américain d’origine Coréenne. Il se disait, Americain de naissance, mais coréen de Coeur. Pour un melting-pot, c’est à revoir.

En France, la situation est encore pire :. Des millions d’immigrants sont marginalisées et obligés de s’installer en masse dans les « cités » de Paris et Lyons où le taux de chomage flotte autour des 20%. Il suffit de penser aux émeutes de 2005 pour constater le résultat! Le plus curieux dans to ça, c’est que le pays continue à être souvent pris en exemple par les « anti-multiculturalistes » Québécois, qui admirent sa laïcité est sa langue.

Churchill a dit que la démocratie est le pire système, excepté les alternatives. Moi je dis : « de même pour le multiculturalisme ! »

Friday, October 12, 2007

A Few Suggestions

Heading towards Harper’s Tuesday evening speech from the Throne, here are a few things Dion should keep in mind.

-Harper is nearing majority territory. One poll put him at the mythical 40% mark, enough to form a majority government. He will no doubt try to engineer his own defeat.

-He will most probably announce Canada’s withdrawal from the Kyoto protocol. Dion’s best counter move is to admit tomorrow that Canada won’t meet its obligations and to follow-up the same day with Michael Ignatieff’s environment platform, which would meet Kyoto a year late but make up for lost time in the years following.

-He may pledge to limit the Federal spending power. This is bad for Canada and Dion should oppose it. Alberta and Quebec will be outraged, the few losses that the Liberals would sustain in their Francophone Quebec seats would be made up by gains in Ontario and in the Maritimes.

-When Harper was in opposition, he once had his backbenchers abstain from a confidence vote to keep the government alive while still voting against it. Unless Harper vows to limit the federal spending power in which case Dion could win an election, Dion ask his backbenchers to skip the vote.

Monday, October 8, 2007

Franco-Ontariens

J’ai promis dans mon précédent message d’émettre quelques commentaires sur l’article que j’ai écrit pour le journal de mon conseil scolaire sur le rassemblement franco-ontarien du 25 septembre.

Parlons alors de fierté.

La fierté franco-ontarienne est un sentiment bien vivant qui anime une majorité de francophones en Ontario. C’est la fierté d’avoir une langue commune, une histoire riche et une culture epanouie. C’est une fierté forte et saine, et pour beaucoup de francophones vivant en Ontario dont moi-même, c'est quelque chose de naturel.

La manifestation organisée le 25 septembre à l’école Charlotte-Lemieux a fourni aux jeunes franco-ontariens de la ville d’Ottawa l’occasion de célébrer leur culture et leur fierté. Elle est due au travail et dévouement du comité organisateur composé de membres du Conseil scolaire et de professeurs. Ceux-ci ont donné de leur temps pour permettre aux élèves de fêter leur fierté franco-ontarienne et ont fait preuve d’une très grande générosité.

Mais, sans rien enlever au dévouement des organisateurs, est-ce vraiment leur rôle? Est-ce vraiment le rôle de l’école de promouvoir activement la fierté franco-ontarienne?

Certains diront que oui ; que l’école française a le mandat de défendre l’identité francophone en Ontario ; que si l’école ne la défend pas, cette identité se perdra. La position se tient. Il suffit de faire un tour à Edmonton ou à Winnipeg et de visiter les quartiers dits « francophones » pour voir ce qui pourrait arriver à la langue française si celle-ci n’était pas protégée par l’état.

Cependant, d’autres diront que non; qu’une prise de position de l’école en faveur d’une identité particulière enfreint l’un des principes fondamentaux de la vie en démocratie : la neutralité de l’état. Cette position aussi se tient. Sans cette neutralité de l’état, nous ouvririons la porte à toutes sortes de conflits identitaires et ethniques. En effet, si les écoles françaises peuvent activement promouvoir l’identité franco-ontarienne, qu’est-ce qui empêche les écoles anglaises de promouvoir l’identité canadienne anglaise, ou les écoles catholiques de promouvoir l’identité catholique. Vous imaginez dans la une du journal /11 000 élèves catholiques assistent au dévoilement d’une croix de 12 mètres de haut dans la cours de l’école Immaculata /ou /11 000 //é//lèves Anglophones se rassemblent pour chanter leur hymne national: It’s our home. /Aïe...

J’aimerais proposer une troisième voie. Une voie qui tient compte des préocupations des deux groupes et défend la langue française tout en respectant la neutralité de l’état.

Il est clair que le français en Ontario est en voie de disparition. Avec chaque nouvelle génération, la population francophone s’amoindrit de façon significative, si bien que dans une centaine d’années, la langue aura sans doute disparue. Mais ceci-dit, la solution prônée par le conseil scolaire –la glorification répétée de l’identité franco-ontarienne- est contre productive. Elle crée une identité fictive basée sur des préjugés et la rancune sans s’adresser au vrai problème : la disparition de la langue française on Ontario.

L’objectif n’est pas de défendre l’identité franco-ontarienne mais de defendre le français. C’est la langue qui fait des franco-ontariens un peuple distinct, et non pas les combats du géant Joe Montferrand ou SOS Monfort.

Au lieu de chanter l’identité franco-ontarienne, chantons la langue française. Découvrons la beauté de notre langue, l’histoire de notre langue, les maîtres de notre langue. Valorisons le bien dit et le bien écrit, attaquons-nous à la mauvaise syntaxe, à la mauvaise orthographe.

Ce n’est pas grace à un drapeau blanc-vert que les jeunes franco-ontariens choisiront d’enseigner le francais à leurs enfants. Mais si ceux-ci apprennent à le maîtriser, le respecter et l’admirer, ils ne pourront se priver de transmettre ce trésor à la prochaine génération.

Moi, je veux que le Franco-ontarien devienne un ontarien francophone.

Sunday, October 7, 2007

Thursday, October 4, 2007

Article

Voici un article que j'ai écrit pour le journal de mon conseil scolaire. La date de parution n'est fixé qu' à la mi octobre, donc prière de ne souffler mot de ceci à personne. Motus et bouche cousue!

Je vous ferai parvenir mes commentaires dans mon prochain message.


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Le 25 Septembre dernier, plus de 11 000 élèves francophones de la région de la capitale nationale se sont rassemblés à l’école élémentaire Charlotte-Lemieux pour célébrer le devoilement du cinquieme Monument de la Francophonie d’Ottawa. Ensemble, ils ont surpassé le record du plus grand rassemblement franco-ontarien qui avait été précédemment fixé au cours de la campagne SOS Monfort. Un gigantesque drapeau blanc-vert de 5 mètres par 15 flotte maintenant dans l’enceinte de l’école Charlotte-Lemieux et rapelle cette journee magique où des jeunes venus de partout dans la ville ont fêté la présence francaise en Ontario.

Toute la matinée, ils ont chanté, dansé leur identité au rythme de la musique de SWING, ZPN, des Tambourinaires de Burundi - Club Remesha et de Brian St-Pierre. Ces artistes francophones engagés étaient venus soutenir la fiérte des étudiants, et ont monté un spectacle excitant qui a donné à la manifestation une veritable vigueur et energie. Plusieurs chorales d’élèves sont aussi montées sur la scène pour interpréter des chansons populaires franco-ontariennes.

A onze heures pile, la musique s’est interompue pour cèder la place au directeur de l’école Charlotte-Lemieux. Celui-ci à parlé de l’importance fondamentale de la culture francophone en Ontario et a exprimé sa profonde joie d’avoir devant lui une foule si nombreuse. D’autres membres distingués de la communauté franco-ontarienne sont aussi passés au micro, avant de laisser la scène libre à un O’Canada général. Puis, enfin, ce fut au tour de Notre Place, l’hymne national franco-ontarien. C’est sur sa musique que le gigantesque trillium vert, le cinquième Monument de la Francophonie d’Ottawa, a été hissé au sommet de son mat de 24 mètres sous les regards émus de la foule.

-«On [a] démontré que la communauté franco-ontarienne [est] autant capable de se rassembler pour protester, comme elle l’a fait pour Montfort, que de se rassembler pour célébrer» s’est exclamé sur le coup Alain Vachon, President des Monuments de la francophonie.

-«La ténacité des Franco-ontariens, leur vigueur et leur détermination constituent un exemple pour l’ensemble des Québécois et des francophones du pays.» a ensuite affirmé le ministre des Affaires intergouvernementales du Québec. Benoît Pelletier, dont le ministère a defrayé les coûts du transport par autobus des élèves.

Le rassemblement a été cloturé à treize heures sous une mélodie de SWING. Ravis par leur matinée, les élèves ne tenaient tous simplements plus en place.

La rassemblement a été diffusé sur Rogers Cable et a fait la une du Droit. Par leur énergie et leur dévouement, les jeunes ont reitérés leur ferme intention de maintenir la flamme francophone vivante en Ontario.

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Surprise

Machiavelli wrote that when things go badly at home, one should travel abroad.

Denis Coderre must have been thinking the same thing lately as he’s just revealed he’s “heading on an unauthorized fact-finding trip to Afghanistan after having his request to visit the troops consistently ignored by the Harper government.”

Surprise, surprise!

Thursday, September 27, 2007

La laïcite au Québec et dans le ROC

Lors du plus récent forum public de la commission Bouchard-Taylor sur les accommodements raisonnables au Québec, M. Alain Chouinard, père de famille de deux enfants, a affirmé : «On ne doit pas faire d'accommodement pour les groupes religieux, que ce soit dans les endroits publics, les écoles, les édifices gouvernementaux. Je pense que la population du Québec vient de sortir de l'emprise de l'Eglise catholique et je ne pense pas que les gens sont prêts à recommencer à embarquer pour les autres religions».

Peu après, un autre citoyen disant s’appeler Carlus a plaidé pour que la societé quebécoise refuse le port de tous signes religieux jugés discriminatoires envers les femmes, comme la burqa ou le niqab. Sa remarque a suscité l’attention du coprésident Bouchard, qui est alors intervenu dans le débat. Celui-ci a relaté avoir rencontré plusieurs femmes musulmanes disant porter le voile de façon volontaire. Mais un membre de l’auditoire a alors lancé à Bouchard « vous en avez rencontré combien? ».

Dans le ROC, on marche dans le sens inverse.

Récemment, le Chef du Parti Progressiste Conservateur en Ontario, John Tory, a proposé de financer les écoles religieuses avec l’argent du trésor public. L’idée a été plutôt mal accueillie, mais le simple fait qu’il ait cru pouvoir en tirer du capital politique en dit long.

De plus, les milieux médiatiques se sont immédiatement rangés de son côté dans des articles comme « make room for the spiritual in educating our young » de Sheema Khan du Globe. Dans La Presse, les titres sont plus du genre « le droit de dire que c’est nono » comme une chronique de Patrick Lagacé que j’ai lue aujoud’hui. Pour vous en donner une idée, le journaliste Québecois affirmait entre autres choses que « Je crois qu’une musulmane a le droit de le porter, son hijab, son niqab. Elle peut même porter la burqa, si ça lui chante. Mais je revendique le droit de dire que c’est nono. »

Quand on parle d’une divergence...

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Referendum

"Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time." (Winston Churchill, from a House of Commons speech on Nov. 11, 1947)

Since Paul Martin’s election victory in 2004, our country has been governed exclusively by minority parliaments. It was foreseeable; there are too many parties. With the right now united, the Greens grabbing 10% of the vote and the Bloc still guaranteed half of the Quebec seats, no party can hope for more than a third of the vote.

Of course, this will all change soon enough. It isn’t the first time that we’ve had successive minority parliaments, and they’ve always eventually been replaced. It could be the Bloc that dies –though I doubt it-, or the Liberals take a new drop in the polls. But rest assured, something will give.

At the moment though, all I can say is: get moving!

I’m just so sick of Minority Governments. They’re useless, confrontational parliaments that make for never-ending debates and force parties to play cheap politics to keep themselves alive. They make governments unresponsive and indecisive. And with reason. How can anyone expect a majority consensus to be reached between members of a team that each cultivate completely opposite and irreconcilable views.

What we need now is a strong majority government that can target a few specific issues with the full support of the house. And if this government is not appreciated, it can be replaced in the next election.

Do we believe in democracy because it’s right, or because it works? We embrace democracy because it works; because it consistently produces successful countries.

The next provincial elections in Ontario will also contain a referendum question about changing the current first-past-the-post electoral system. I have already compared the Westminster system to proportional Rep. so I won’t go through the arguments once more. I just wanted to advise my dear Ontarian readers, when making their voting choice, to think with their brain rather than their heart.

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Dion

There’s nothing like a major screw-up to look good by bouncing back.

Two days after seeing his handpicked candidate suffer a humiliating defeat in the Outremont by-election to the hands of the NDP, Stephane Dion has regrouped his party and started over again from January with a new breath of life.

This morning, after finishing my usual session of violin practice, I decided to pick up the computer and spend a few minutes reading the Globe and Mail online. While waiting for the page to load, I had trying to guess the day’s front page story. “The Lonnie nearly reached parity with the Greenback yesterday,” I told myself, “so there’s bound to be something on that topic. Maybe there’d also been something about the Ontario elections, they seem to be generating a lot of excitement.

Well it was neither the Loonie not McGuinty. The headline read “Dion wants Khadr Tried in Civil Court.” That was certainly a surprising. “Dion, in the newspaper? ” All the more astonishing that he had already had a good mention on the previous day. What was he doing to deserve such publicity,” I asked myself again.

But the answer is actually deceivingly simple: Dion’s finally decided to break out of his shell and become a real leader. He’s always been in total command of his files, and decisions such as the handpicking of Foreign Affairs expert and academic Jocelyn Coulon demonstrate this very well, but he’s never actually gone off to sell thesis idea to Canadians. Stephane Dion has no charistma, and no communications skill, but he does his homework and understands his files. Now he needs to demonstrate that to Canadians.

Monday, September 17, 2007

Liberal Nightmare

I’d hate to be Stephane Dion at the moment…

After eighty years of nearly uninterrupted rule, the Liberals have lost power in their traditional Montreal stronghold of Outremont to the charismatic NDP candidate Thomas Mulcair. The final results have yet to be announced, but the latest tallies show the NDP gathering nearly 50% of the votes with the Liberals trailing nearly twenty percent behind.

This by-election in Outremont has long been considered a sort of referendum of Stéphane Dion. A strong victory was required to strengthen his leadership and give the Liberal party a new breath of air heading into the fall sitting of the house. But instead, he has seen his hand-picked star candidate and academic get trounced by a charismatic Teacher and ex-Quebec environment minister.

The party is going to be furious. If they can’t win in Outremont, what proves that they can still win in Toronto, is Vancouver? Is there any such thing left as an impenetrable Liberal bastion.

Dion has a lot of work ahead of him. A by-election is only a by-election, and Outremont has already gone once to the Conservatives when Brian Mulroney came to power. But as Bette Davis once said "Fasten your seatbelts. It's going to be a bumpy ride."

Monday, September 10, 2007

Port du niquab - Centième message

Une décision d’Elections Canada en vue de permettre au femmes musulmanes de voter le visage couvert a provoqué une petite polémique dans le pays. Comme les chefs des quatres partis politiques principaux se sont tous immédiatement prononcés contre la decision, le directeur général d’Elections Canada est revenu à la charge en affirmant encore une fois qu’aucune loi n’obligeait à se découvrir pour voter. Les médias se sont évidemment régalés de l’affaire, et on a eu droit à un échange d’idées assez stimulant.

Le Canada est un pays pragmatique. Un pays qui sait tracer la ligne entre l’application stricte de la loi et l’accommodement raisonnable. Le jugement de la Cour Suprême permettant le port du Kirpan à l’école en est un parfait example : 0 incident + présence d’autres armes facilement accessibles dans des écoles (battes de baseball, batons de hockey) = accomodement.

Pour le port du Niquab aux urnes, il faut faire preuve du même état d’esprit. Y a-t-il vraiment un risque de fraude ? Pourrait-il vraiment y avoir un complot capable de modifier les résultats d’un scrutin profitant du droit des femmes musulmanes de voter le visage couvert ? Bien sûr que non. Que les femmes aient le droit de voter le visage couvert ou non, le resultat du scrutin sera le même. Alors, choisissons l’accomodement.

Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Income Trusts

Fresh from a four day caucus retreat in St. John’s, NL, Stéphane Dion’s Liberals have hinted that their party would consider scraping a moratorium on the creation of new income trusts if they win office – but perhaps only for a limited number of industries including the oil sands.

Income trusts are investors’ greatest friends. By allowing firms to pass profits down to shareholders, thereby avoiding most forms of corporate taxes, they allow for monstrous dividends that easily outperform those of traditional publicly trades corporations. The decision to proscribe them was a good one. A tax system with a loophole of that size is by definition inefficient, and, in the case of income trusts, encourages firms to pass pay dividends instead of reinvesting profits.

But the Liberal proposal still has some merit, provided that it only apply to certain industries like the oil patch where the government already makes profits from drilling royalties. It’s a matter of keeping Canadian capital markets competitive. In the globalising world, we must increasingly ask ourselves the question: why would foreigners choose to invest in Canada over another country? At the moment, they have no particular reason for doing so. Canada has its stock exchanges, but they are of the conventional sort that can be found in every developed country. As one investor pointed out: “we really don't have a Canadian capital markets story. We don't have an AIM [London's Alternative Investment Market], we don't have a Nasdaq. What is particularly distinct about the Canadian capital markets?

There’s well publicised court proceeding going on in the States involving an angry stockbroker who sent Finance Minister Flaherty death threats after he announcement the moratorium on income trusts. He had invested millions on his clients’ money in stocks of Canadian income trusts, and had seen their value plummet. But let me ask you this: if these trusts hadn’t been allowed, were would these millions have gone? Not likely to Canada.

Monday, September 3, 2007

Tant de signes ne mentent pas

Kyoto : La majorité des pays européens prévoient d’atteindre leurs objectifs de réduction d’émissions. Le Canada a déjà renoncé.

Productivité : D’après une étude de l’Organisation Internationale du Travail, la productivité est en baisse constante au Canada.

Passage du Nord-Ouest: Les Russes multiplient les missions militaires et les démonstrations de force. Les Danois lançent une série de missions scientifiques importantes. Le Canada n’a toujours pas de navires capables de le traverser en hiver.

Competitivité : Une étude du Conference Board of Canada trouve chez nous un peuple « plongé dans un état de médiocrité » et « qui a peur du succès».

Tant de signes ne mentent pas.

Saturday, September 1, 2007

History Is History

During the night of Febuary 13th 1945, the allies led by the Royal Air Force Bomber Command and Marshal Arthur “Bomber” Harris, destroyed the historic city of Dresden, taking between 35 and 60 thousand lives. Among the participants in the bombing raid were Canadian airmen who, acting upon the orders of their British superior, dropped thousands of tons of incendiary bombs onto innocent civilians and refugees. These are historical facts.

The bombing of Dresden first made it into RAF military plans in early 1944 because of nearby railway yards and an intelligence report pointing to the city as a point of passage for Axis troops. In fall of that year, American flying fortresses from the 8th USAAF eight air force targeted and razed the yards, so the initial RAF plan to bomb the city heart was dropped. It was only reactivated in 1945 on the advice of Winston Churchill who wanted to give Stalin a demonstration of Allied strength. RAF briefing notes justified the bombing as a way of showing "the Russians, when they arrive, what Bomber Command can do." These are also historical facts.

Last Wednesday, the Canadian War Museum succumbed to pressure from Veterans of the Canadian Bombing Command who wanted the 67-word description of the bombing of Dresden changed. The text had been written by a group of historians, but the veterans objected to it saying that "the value and morality of the strategic bomber offensive against Germany remains bitterly contested," and contrasting the 600,000 German civilian deaths with the statement that "the raids resulted in only small reductions of German war production”. The Museum has agreed to adjust the wording in the panel to reflect the veterans’ demands, and has promised to have the new panel installed by October.

The Veterans of the Canadian Forces who risked their lives as part of the British led Bomber Command are heroes. They obeyed the orders of their superiors faithfully and acted in the name of their country and in the name of freedom and human rights. That they participated in the bombing of Dresden, or of other European cities, takes nothing away from this immense courage and heroism. Canadians must never forget the incredible sacrifice made by these veterans who, in the name of their country and of human rights, risked their lives on every sortie.

In their name, Canadians have erected a number of war memorials across the country for new generations of Canadians to acknowledge and remember the sacrifice of our Second World War heroes. But the Canadian War Museum is not one of those places. In the words of great Canadian historian Margaret MacMillan “a museum is not a war memorial. It should allow the public to make up their own minds."

The mandate of the Canadian War Museum is “Educate, Preserve, Remember”. When the museum gives in to pressure from angry veterans and manipulates history to suit their view, it does not educate –it misleads-, it does not preserve -it manipulates- and does not remember –it forgets-.

Thursday, August 30, 2007

La Clarté Libérale

En retraite de deux jours à St John’s, les Libéraux ont passé du temps à paufiner leur stratégie pour l’automne en compagnie de leur sondeur Michael Marzolini. Dans une allocution prononcée pour le caucus, celui-ci a declaré que le Parti courait d’excellentes chances de remporter la prochaine élection à condition qu’il puisse mettre sur la table des politiques claires et novatrices. Et bien que M. Marzolini ait peut-être choisi de diffuser un message trompeur en compagnie des médias, je crois que vous serez d’accords avec moi pour affirmer qu’il sonne vrai.

Depuis l’élection de Stéphane Dion comme chef de parti, les Libéraux ont éprouvé une peine visisble à se demarquer des autres partis de l’opposition. En début d’année, ceci n’était peut-être dû qu’à l’inexpérience de leur chef, mais il faudrait maintenant se demander si le problème ne serait pas plutôt au niveau du message.

Les Libéraux nous montrent tous les jours qu’ils savent critiquer; qu’ils ne sont pas d’accords avec les positions du Gouvernement Conservateur. Mais que proposent-ils, eux? Quelle est leur vision?

Le problème des Libéraux, c’est qu’ils ont trop critiqué, et trop peu proposé. Pendant la course à la direction, les candidats ont souvent participé à des debats où ils avaient l’occasion d’échanger des idées; Stéphane Dion a gagné la campagne sur sa grande idée : le système aux trois pilliers. Les Canadiens ont visiblement appreciés car les Libéraux ont mené dans les sondages pendant la course.

D’après les plus récents sondages, la plupart des Canadiens n’aiment pas Harper. Ils n’aiment pas sa vision, et n’aiment pas son style de leadership. Stéphane Dion à proposé aux membres du Parti Libéral une solution alternative claire et simple : qu’il la propose aux Canadiens.

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

The Hollowing Out

With a 6 percent unemployment rate and the highest GDP growth in the G7, it would be difficult to make the Canadian economy look any stronger. And while it remains unclear to whom the credit is due, a CTV/Globemedia poll released today showed that, as expected, Stephen Harper’s Conservatives are cashing in!

This is definitely bad news for Dion and the Liberals, as sound economic management has traditionally been perceived as their biggest strength. With that asset now lost to Harper, one of Dion’s main focuses for the coming year will be to snatch it back by demonstrating to Canadians that the strong economy is not due to Mr. Harper’s good management, but to a combination of Alberta Oil Sands growth and ten years of Liberal rule.

All I can say is that he faces a steep climb. Let’s face it, it’s difficult to convince Canadians that the economy is being badly handled when the unemployment rate is at a 33 year low, but the one area that may hold the solution to his problem is the “hollowing out” of head offices.

In the past two years of Conservative rule, we’ve seen an unprecedented number of Canadian firms get taken over by foreign giants. First it was Inco, then Falconbridge, then the 350 year old HBC, then Fairmont Hotels, then Alcan, and yesterday, the country’s last steel producer: Stelco. Though Canadians might not be known for their strong sense of patriotism, it’s only natural to feel a certain anxiety when so many head offices start moving abroad. This was further demonstrated by yesterday’s same CTV poll, which also showed a large majority of Canadians concerned by the recent trend.

Sound economic management has been central to the Liberal brand ever since the Chrétien/Martin team slayed the deficit. Dion ran his leadership campaign on “the three pillar approach”: a sound economy, a just society, and sustainability. According to the poll, he’s sold himself to Canadians on the last two issues; time to regain the first.

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Stuff

The Globe just published a fantastic editorial that you should all read. People often say that you should think twice before altering your lifestyle to meet the recommendations of the latest studies, I guess this is why!

There also another Globe article which is really worth reading called Adolescence is Obsolete. Written by Tralee Pierce, a well known Globe Life journalists, it reviews the work of Dr. Robert Epstein, former editor of Psychology Today, who argued in a recent book that the concept of adolescence serves little purpose other than creating “Frankensteins of our own making”. Most of Dr. Epstein’s suggestions are pure and total nonsense (giving teens the right to vote if they can pass a test…), but he really does succeed in bringing home the point that today’s teens have fallen victim to a nasty stereotype which prevents them from being handed responsibility.

Finally, I’d like to point you to the websites of the four main national parties: Conservative, Liberal, NDP and Green. I’d just like you to take a look at the front pages. On the Liberal, NDP and Green party websites, you’ll see positive front pages detailing the party’s successes, and bottom bars of constructive criticism of the government. The pictures of the leader also appear, but they are small and on the sidebars. On the CPC page, the first thing you see is a big picture of the great Stephen Harper. Beside that, there is a scrollbar with the latest Not a Leader negative ads, and right under, three columns of text each called: MORE CONSPIRACY THEORIES FROM THE RED-GREEN COALITION, Stéphane Dion: Conspiracy Theorist, and Where Does Stéphane Dion Actually Stand on Afghanistan?

Doesn’t that say something about the values of each party!

Friday, August 24, 2007

Provocateurs

Thank god for YouTube.

Earlier this week, a video of the Montebello Summit protests was posted on YouTube, where it was noticed that a trio of particularly violent rock-throwing protesters who seemed to be egging on violence were wearing Sureté du Québec boots. The police force originally denied all involvement in the incident, but has now been forced by YouTube evidence into admitting the existence of “undercover agents but not provocateurs”. The only thing left to explain is why those “agents” were throwing rocks.

The Ministry of Public Safety, led by Minister Stockwell Day, has also chosen to downplay the incident, and has repeatedly refused calls for a public inquiry. Day is also claiming that "The thing that was interesting in this particular incident, three people in question were spotted by protesters because were not engaging in violence,". I guess that neither he nor his department have much of a choice, but they’ve both demonstrated that they haven’t quite gotten that new media thing.

They can deny involvement, they can manipulate facts, but regardless of what they do, the truth is only one click away.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Separate School Funding

Ontario PC leader John Tory has recently promised to extend public funding to Jewish, Muslim and Christian schools that agree to follow the provincial curriculum, calling it a matter of fairness. His announcement followed an Ontario Green Party pledge to end public funding of Roman Catholic Schools.

The Liberal Party of Premier Dalton McGuinty remains firmly in favour of a status-quo, and the Premier was quoted earlier today as stating that “he didn’t think that Ontarians believed that improvement or progress was defined as inviting children of different faiths to leave the publicly funded system and go to their own schools,” and “That's the system that we have inherited,”.

It certainly looks as if the funding of separate schools in Ontario is emerged once again as a hot-button issue, and the stakes this time are as high as they ever were: a PC victory would most probably mark the beginning of a new era in the Ontario education system, while a second Liberal triumph would confirm the status-quo as the preferred option and keep the issue buried for another twenty years.

The separation of church and state has long been a requirement for a country to achieve true legitimacy and righteousness. In 1966, the right to a secular state was enshrined in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Canada adhered, and in 1982, we Canadians made it a fundamental part of their identity by including it section 2 of our newly repatriated constitution.

The present funding system in place in Ontario clearly violates this principal, and was ruled discriminatory by both the Supreme Court and the United-Nations. Yet Ontarians chose to do nothing, our leaders preferring the status-quo to a political minefield which would necessarily pass through an amendment of the BNA Act and a battle with the powerful Catholic Lobby.

But now, two new party leaders are proposing a change. The first one, towards full funding for all religious schools, and the second, towards a final end to state funded separate schools. Both changes would bring back full secularity for the Ontario government, so the choice left to voters is namely the choice of secularities.

The European vision of a secular state is of one which repudiates all demonstrations of religious faith and actively seeks to restrict them to the confines of private life. This explains legislation such as the infamous French law 2004-228 that banned “the carrying of symbols or garb which are religious in nature or appearance in public primary and secondary schools.”

At the opposite end of the spectrum, we have John Tory’s vision: a state that seeks to satisfy all religious groups by segregating them into separate systems specifically tailored to fit their religious values and beliefs. This vision is an inefficient as it is divisive, and quickly becomes, as Ontario Green Party leader Frank de Jong put it: “a can of worms”.

A successful secular state is neither of the above. It does not seek to take religion out of the public eye, but neither does it aim to satisfy everyone by funding independent religious communities. Rather, it simply accepts the beauty of all religious beliefs that don’t go against fundamental rights of citizens, and avoids using them as a basis for discrimination.

The current funding pattern goes against a UN convention and the Charter; it is simply wrong. The PC vision will create conflict, division, and will see students placed in artificial religious communities resembling in nothing the real world for which school is supposed to be preparing them. Only the Green Party proposal corresponds to the definition of a thriving and successful secular state, as it promotes sharing, understanding, tolerance and non-discrimination.

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Xénophobie?

Le chef de l’opposition officielle du Québec, Mario Dumont, a soulevé cette semaine toute une polémique dans la Belle-Province en affirmant que le Québec avait atteint son seuil maximal d’absobtion d’immigrants. Dans une entrevue avec Patrick Lagacé de La Presse, il a en effet soutenu que « [le Quebec] est pas mal sur [sa] capacité d'accueil » et que « À court terme, peut-être que tu règles des problèmes de marché du travail. T'auras des entreprises où toute la main-d'oeuvre va parler une autre langue, va vivre autrement dans un ghetto. ». Ses propos ont immédiatement été condamnés par le Premier-Ministre Jean Charest ainsi que par la chef du PQ Pauline Marois, qui ont tous deux affirmé que la province devait au contraire augmenter son seuil actuel de 45 000 par annee à 60 000, mais malgré la position des deux autres partis principaux, il semble indéniable que la vision de M. Dumont gagne rapidement de nouveaux appuis et pourrait vraisemblablement prendre le dessus dans un futur pas si lointain.

Cette plus récente sortie du chef de l’ADQ n’est en fait qu’un nouvel épisode du débat sur « les accomodements raisonables » qui se tient au Québec depuis l’affaire d’Hérouxville et qui semble indiquer de profonds chamboulements dans la société de la province. Il faudrait en effet quasiment remonter au référendum de 95 pour revoir un tel niveau d’effervescence intellectuelle et de passion. Rares sont les hommes politiques et chroniqueurs à ne pas s’être prononcés sur la question, et les titres d’éditoriaux des grands quotidiens semblent contenir le mot « immigration » une fois sur deux.

Malheureusement, comme je l’ai indiqué plus haut c’est la vision de M. Dumont, fermée et xénophobe, qui a le vent dans les voiles, ce qui soulève de nombreuses questions sur l’état de la société Québécoise actuelle.

Plusieurs chroniqueurs, dont André Pratte de La Presse, affirment que la montée du sentiment anti-immigrant n’est en fait qu’un symptome d’une phobie croissante chez les Québécois de souche de tout ce qui n’est pas Francophone et athée. De même, Le Devoir a publié aujourd’hui une lettre d’un certain Jimmy St-Gelais de Saint-Jérôme titrée : Reflexe de conquis, où celui-ci soutient que cette montée xénophobe est une « riposte réactionnaire » de la part de la nation Québécoise Francophone contre la baisse démographique qu’elle est en train de connaître.

Ce sont là des propos troublants, et je me permets d’espérer qu’ils s’avèreront être sans bon fondement, cependant, après avoir réécouté l’entrevue de M. Dumont avec Patrick Lagagé, je redoute le pire.

Friday, August 17, 2007

Buy Peace

Tony Blair is a man on a mission. Last June, he assumed a new position as Middle East Peace Envoy of the Quartet (or the United States, European Union, United Nations and Russia), and he now needs to start finding solutions to finally put an end to this interminable state of turmoil.

I think he has a plan. If not, why on earth would he have forgone a comfortable retirement to the after-dinner circuit with his good friend Bill Clinton by assuming a mandate that has been sinking Western leaders for over half a century. Yes, Tony Blair has a plan; and if his plan is the one I have in mind, and the one that experts have had in mind quite for quite some time, well who knows, it may just work.

Imagine being a young Palestinian Muslim man living in small village near Ariel Sharon’s concrete wall. A few years back, a battalion of Israeli tanks stormed into your village and took the soul of one of your friends who had come to protest against the destruction of a Mosque in Jerusalem by Israeli Armed Forces. Then, just last year, a bomb, no doubt Israeli, landed near your village’s granary and destroyed many months worth of food, forcing the whole community to ration itself nearly to death until the next harvest.

As could be expected, you hate Israelis, so one day, when a group of fighters from a Radical Muslim group come to your village with food and water to preach the destruction of Israel, you decide to take up arms and join them in their holy struggle against the Western Invaders.

The next week, you and your new comrades spot a lone patrol of Israeli soldiers standing guard near the wall. You shoot, and you hear a long, tearing scream as one of them falls to the ground. You feel guilty about having spilt blood, but you remind yourself that these white armed men are nothing more than cold-blooded invaders who killed a friend of yours a few years back. So you stay the course. But while you are away fighting against foreign invaders, your family is still at home in your little village and suffering terribly from a drought. At the same time, you hear that a group of western doctors and diplomats from a “peace agency” recently arrived in your village and are offered to grant all the inhabitants a constant supply of water and grains if you and the other young fighters of the village return home.

At the same time, the leader of your guerrilla group receives a notice from that same Western “peace agency” that he is being offered a credit flow of thirty thousand US dollars a month in exchange for the dismantling of his group. The flow will remain open for as long as he stays out of terrorist-related activities, and can be used partly to fund the construction of a new Mosque in East-Jerusalem.

Then, also at the same time, the ten most influential mullahs of the area also receive a note from this “peace agency”, this one asking them to accept an invitation to Jerusalem to participate in the new rounds of negotiations for the creation of a Palestinian state. All their costs would of course be covered, and each would be granted a beautiful new mansion and a seat in the Palestinian Upper Chamber as a token of Western appreciation of their relentless work to bring peace.

I’m not an economist, nor a political scientist, so I probably haven’t quite figured out how much needs to be paid to the various actors to provide strong incentives, but I do know this: Blair needs to buy the ceasefire, buy an agreement to hold democratic elections, buy out the local chieftains, and satisfy the religious leaders. And if he can convince his friends in Brussels and Washington to grant him the cash, there’s a good change he’ll get peace… and maybe also the Nobel.

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Remaniement du cabinet

Il y a vraiment matière à s’esclaffer en regardant la nouvelle composition du cabinet Harper. Le premier ministre a visiblement choisi de rester conservateur en maintenant bien ancrée dans les moeurs de son gouvernement la vieille tradition d’incompétence ministérielle.

Le grand fardeau du cabinet, le Général Gordon O’Connor, a été deplacé de laDéfense... au Trésor Public, où sa formation militaire lui sera sans doute d’une grande utilité. Et pour le remplacer, Harper a choisi de nommer son vieil ami Peter MacKay, l’ancien chef du PCC qui fut probablement l’un des pires Ministres des Affaires Etrangères des dix dernières années. Ensuite il y a Maxime Bernier, l’ex-conseiller de Bernard Landry qui représentera maintenant le Canada sur la scène internationale en remplaçant MacKay, et qui a pour seul mérite d’être un élève obéissant et bien habillé, toujours prêt à exécuter les moindres désirs du maître Harper.

Du côté des femmes (je dit bien ça parce qu’il n’y en a que 6 dans tout le cabinet), la calgarienne Diane Ablonczy, l’un des seuls visages prometteurs du caucus conservateur est promue au poste de... Secretaire d’Etat responsable des petites entreprises et du tourisme, et les ministres Bev Oda et Josée Verner, qui se sont laissées submerger par les terrifiants dossiers de la Culture et du Développement International, échangent de portfolios, histoire de garder les idées claires.

Le plus drôle dans tout cela, c’est que tout ces efforts ne serviront à strictement rien. La maison de sondage Ipsos Reid a étudié les intentions de vote trois mois avant et trois mois après tous les grands remaniements du cabinet fédéral depuis 1988. Sa conclusion: dans presque tous les cas, les intentions de vote déclarées de la population sont restées les mêmes. Et avec un Harper qui conserve de toute façon un contrôle total sur les gestes et paroles de ses ministres, la tendance n’est pas prête de se renverser.