Sunday Poem: “Dear Mrs. B”

 

We regret to inform you

that your son has died this morning

when securing a road

south of Kandahar.

 

The Improvised Explosive Device

gave him no chance.

 

He who set the device

was in our hands

the hours before the explosion;

he refused, however, to disclose

the exact location of the bomb,

and we did not want to torture

or become uncivilized

when seeking this kind of information.

 

We respected his right to remain silent.

 

You may find comfort knowing

that he is resting now

after discussing his options

with his lawyer.

 

Your son died for a noble cause,

Mrs. B –– .

 

By Shai Ben-Shalom

Review: You’re Not In Germany

If aliens invaded, a prime minister’s first duty would be to get premiers on the phone. Airspace is clearly federalized under the Aeronautics Act. But what if invaders land on islands and travel by ferry to terrorize the populace? If it’s a British Columbia ferry, that is provincial jurisdiction. Newfoundland and Labrador ferry, federal.

The space enemy may use laser beams to make trees explode or boil mountain lakes. That is clearly provincial jurisdiction. But let one errant death ray touch a single rivet on a railway trestle and you are dealing with the Government of Canada, my friend.

This is “the incredible fragmentation we have in this country among federal, provincial and municipal governments,” as then-Senator Howard Wetston (Ont.), a former federal judge, once put it. Wetston was referring to regulation of light bulbs.

Federalism In Canada puts all the pieces together but with a striking difference. Scholar Thomas Hueglin is not from here. Hueglin is German-born. With a completely open mind, he did what every political scientist should do: jump in the car.

“One could not understand Canada nor its bewildering literature on federalism without having seen it, the vast spaces separating one region from the other,” writes Hueglin. “In southern Germany, where I grew up, one could drive to five countries within a few hours. Just to get out of Ontario took almost exponentially more time. With distance came diversity.”

“In Winnipeg I saw the railyards connecting the two halves of the country,” recalls Hueglin; “In Calgary I was shown the new PetroCan building as a sinister symbol of Trudeau’s centralist machinations.” This was 1983.

Hueglin discovered the traveler’s secret hidden from Ottawa, “a remote lumber town.” Nobody who drives from Winnipeg to Vancouver is struck by the all-seeing presence of the federal government. Hueglin spent a week reading the Saskatoon Star-Phoenix and found a single reference to Ottawa. “The physical distance between Ottawa and Saskatoon is nearly 3,000 kilometres and neither city is anywhere near the edge of the country,” he writes.

Federalism In Canada is fresh and matter of fact, a constitutional travelogue. The genius of Canada is the pride and purpose of the provinces, so different one from the other. Scholars for years have argued whether this was a happy accident or a reflection of the genius of Fathers of Confederation. Professor Hueglin falls into the “happy accident” camp, but 154 years of success speaks for itself.

“Confederation not so much constituted a universal agreement on first principles as it was a working compromise allowing for different interpretations for each of the participants,” writes Hueglin. The contrasts between participants are striking.

“I crossed from Saskatchewan into Alberta, two provinces a world of political culture apart yet indistinguishable from one dusty Prairie town to the next,” writes Hueglin. The same could be said of Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, Yukon and the Northwest Territories.

Our country is “an agreement cobbled together,” writes Hueglin. “Remarkable,” he concludes. “All through its history there have been and still are deep disagreements about the meaning of federalism,” and for all that here we are in Year 155.

By Holly Doan

Federalism in Canada: Contested Concepts and Uneasy Balances, by Thomas O. Hueglin; University of Toronto Press; 384 pages; ISBN 9781-4426-36453; $54.95

Warn Consul To Get Packing

Opposition MPs yesterday told New York Consul Tom Clark to “keep your bags packed” after the next election. Testifying at the Commons government operations committee, Clark denied any role in the federal purchase of his $8.8 million Manhattan penthouse despite documents to the contrary: “Why don’t we just stop the lying?”

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Hands Off Pilots, Says NDP

New Democrats yesterday said they will fight any federal interference in an Air Canada strike or lockout. Failed contract talks with some 5,400 members of the Air Line Pilots Association would ground planes nationwide as early as next week: “If you want to make it a confidence vote, make it one.”

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Gov’t Censor Bill Challenged

Attorney General Arif Virani faces a direct challenge over cabinet’s signature bill to censor speech on the internet. Conservative MP Michelle Rempel Garner (Calgary Nose Hill) yesterday said an alternative Opposition bill will target online crimes without “putting a chill on Charter-protected speech.”

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Prison Costs Now $428 A Day

Operating costs at federal prisons last year were the equivalent of $428 per inmate per day, according to Statistics Canada figures. The Correctional Service cautions actual expenses are much higher when including equipment, prison guards’ pensions and other costs: ‘Canada’s is among the highest resourced correctional systems in the world.’

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Faith In Fed Gov’t Collapsing

A majority of voters outside Québec do not trust the Government of Canada and rate it secretive and incompetent, says in-house Privy Council research. The pre-election findings follow Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s statement that “Canadians’ need to have faith in their government’s honesty.”

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Now Sudden Death Overtime

Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre yesterday said he will compel the Commons to vote no confidence in cabinet as soon as possible and send voters into a fall election. It is “put up or shut up time for the NDP,” Poilievre told reporters: “Which will it be?”

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Copps Meddled In Emblem

Parks Canada blames former Deputy Prime Minister Sheila Copps for ordering staff to put a smile on the agency’s beaver mascot. Managers resisted but were instructed to do as they were told, say Access To Information records: “The next election resulted in a change of government and the smile was removed.”

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PM Is Slim Pickings: Blanchet

There is not much “left of the leadership of Mr. Trudeau,” Bloc Québécois leader Yves-François Blanchet yesterday told reporters. Blanchet said his caucus will press cabinet for passage of favoured bills but had no interest in keeping Liberals in office any longer than necessary: “Let there be no ambiguity here.”

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Wildfire Risk Was “Political”

Internal emails show Parks Canada executives feared “public and political perception” in managing fire hazards at Jasper, Alta. Access To Information records yesterday released by Conservative MP Dan Mazier (Dauphin-Swan River, Man.) are dated only months before wildfire destroyed a third of the town: “Very disturbing.”

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Freeland Opposes Film Grant

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland yesterday said public funding should be pulled from a Canadian-produced film Russians At War. The documentary promoted by the Toronto International Film Festival depicts Russian soldiers on the Ukrainian front as war-weary conscripts: “It’s not right for Canadian public money to be supporting the screening and production of a film like this.”

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