Poem: “Lo! A Bureaucrat!”

 

Lo! A bureaucrat,

Alights upon the scene,

The power to redact and enact,

With countenance so serene.

 

Nary a T nor an I,

Can be allotted,

And by piercing eye,

Crossed and dotted.

 

Oh! Who can contend?

With the dreadful intellect,

That by flick of pen amend,

The very wishes of the elect.

 

Freighted with humility,

And treated so reverent!

But alas, weighted with duty,

It thus burdens our servant.

 

The Gray Glory of the Bureaucrat!

Doth mark on the Kings account,

Supreme over the autocrat,

 

EXPENSES NOT APPROVED

 

By W.N. Branson

Review: How To Become A Judge

Canadians like to think of our judiciary as a meritocracy, in the same manner we have a naïve faith that oncoming motorists will stay on their side of the white line. Of course, car wrecks happen all the time.

Professor Dale Brawn examines who’s behind the wheel in Canadian courts. The result is a beautifully-researched and entertaining study of 80 years of judicial appointments in a single province, Manitoba, from 1870 to 1950. Brawn chooses his subject well. Manitoba was for years the lone outpost of the judiciary on the Prairie frontier.

Judges were by degrees brilliant and mediocre, studious and alcoholic, a grab bag of “pretty fair lawyers” and political fixers. One appointee was rated as having “but a small amount of brains and knows absolutely no law.”

“The Manitoba judiciary played a key role in bringing the prairies into Confederation,” notes Paths To The Bench; “They sat on the region’s highest courts during a time when the nation was undergoing a period of rapid social, economic and legal transformation. Judges in the late nineteenth century were responsible for laying down a legal foundation on which frontier societies were built, and their judgments gave shape and form to the institutions of the day be legitimating the social order”.

Who were these judges? Typically wealthy, married, Protestant corporate lawyers with a membership in the Masonic Lodge and a father-in-law in the legislature. Professor Brawn recounts the 1928 correspondence of one judge who advised his son on how to make the bench: Get elected to town council, take up curling; join all the important golf clubs and become a Mason.

He recounts too the jottings of MP Ralph Maybank, a longtime Liberal fixer who managed federal appointments in the province till recommending himself to the bench in 1951: “We must settle on any Liberals at all. I repeat that – any Liberals at all,” Maybank wrote.

And mind the Catholics. “The French have two ideas,” Maybank told a friend. “The first is that one of their own ought to be appointed and, of course, they have all history on their side. The second is that if they can’t get one of their own they won’t have an Irish Catholic. They say if they surrender their position to an Irish Catholic, the Irish Catholics will always thereafter insisted that they are entitled to that representation on the bench as a minority right. Of course my own view is that all this business about choosing judges because they are Catholics either French or Irish or English is all damned nonsense.”

No Jews were allowed till 1952. “If a Jew were given an appointment which a French-Canadian ought to have…their rage would know no bounds,” Maybank wrote. The latent anti-Semitism of judicial appointments continued long afterward. When Supreme Court Chief Justice Bora Laskin died in 1984 the Globe & Mail awkwardly described him as “the first ethnic Canadian to hold the top judicial post”. Laskin was born in Thunder Bay.

Most importantly, judicial appointees lobbied very hard for the post. They buttonholed MPs and served on commissions, ran as director of the livestock association or Children’s Aid Society, perhaps published a scholarly work. “Lawyers have long known that it is in their professional, political and social best interest to make themselves known to others,” Brawn writes; “While not everything they did was self-serving, much was.”

Paths To The Bench documents the courts of the kerosene era, but readers are forgiven for wondering if much has changed. In Brandon a genial attorney named Joe Mullally once ran a storefront office handling wills and divorces. Joe agreed to serve as director of the Legal Aid Society. Twice he ran hopeless Liberal campaigns for Parliament. In a 1983 Brandon byelection Mullally finished third – there were only three candidates – and lost by 14,000 votes. “It hurts a little,” Joe told a reporter. On Pierre Trudeau’s last week in office in 1984 he named Mullally to the Court of Queen’s Bench.

By Holly Doan

Paths To The Bench: The Judicial Appointment Process In Manitoba 1870-1950, by Dale Brawn; University of British Columbia Press; 320 pages; ISBN 9780-7748-26761; $32.95

Gov. Macklem Predicts Crisis

Canadians should expect weaker growth, higher costs and more uncertainty due to Trump tariffs, Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem said yesterday. His remarks coincided with new Canadian Federation of Independent Business data indicating 19 percent of small business owners plan summer layoffs: “We now face a new economic crisis.”

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No Carbon Tax Layoffs Here

The Canada Revenue Agency yesterday would not explain why it was keeping hundreds of employees in its carbon tax unit since Prime Minister Mark Carney announced he was “eliminating” the consumer charge. A battalion of clerks was hired to process revenues and rebate cheques: “What were the annual costs?”

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Media Just One Big Fed Dep’t

Growing subsidies will turn much of Canadian media into a federally controlled Crown corporation “if not a department of government,” an Ottawa think tank said yesterday. The Macdonald-Laurier Institute in a report by a former Calgary Herald publisher warned media reliance on taxpayers’ aid was corrosive and self-defeating: “This is no way to maintain public trust in journalism.”

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Senators Claim Jewish Crimes

Four Liberal-appointed senators yesterday signed an anti-Israel petition accusing Jews of genocide. The petition singled out soldiers and air crew of the Israeli Defence Forces with allegations of atrocities: “This will not soon be forgotten.”

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Feds Knew Target Was Faked

Cabinet in a secret internal memo last June 18 acknowledged it could not meet its housing target despite repeated promises to the public. The memo is dated two months after cabinet promised its housing plan was “unlocking the door to the middle class for millions.”

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Lib Activists Deny Meddling

A federally-sponsored advocacy group yesterday admitted to contacting a convention hall over its rental of space to a group critical of the Liberal Party. The taxpayer-subsidized Canadian Anti-Hate Network acknowledged making the call but denied acting at the government’s direction: “We are a completely independent organization.”

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Protestors Not Literally Nazis

Anti-Israel street protestors should not be called Nazis per se, a national press ombudsman has ruled. Likening street demonstrators to members of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party was “overly broad,” said the National News Media Council: “Thinkers have argued the term ‘Nazi’ should only be reserved for those responsible for the Holocaust.”

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Forget EV Mandates: Industry

Automakers yesterday petitioned British Columbia to repeal its electric vehicle mandate, first in the nation. The B.C. program set the pattern for a federal mandate that proposes to outlaw the new sale of gas or diesel powered cars by 2035: ‘Sales targets will not be achieved.’

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Fined $164,000 Over Migrants

Federal inspectors yesterday disclosed a steep penalty for breach of migrant labour regulations. An Alberta gas station operator was fined $164,000 and banned from the Temporary Foreign Worker Program for five years: ‘The department previously conducted few on-site inspections.’

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Didn’t Spend Cash They Had

Military reserves are now 25 percent short of their targeted minimum strength, records show. The Department of National Defence in an in-house report said reserves were so poorly managed they did not spend more than a billion approved by Parliament to get them up to strength: ‘Lack of coherence has repercussions.’

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I Will Recuse Myself, Says PM

Prime Minister Mark Carney yesterday said he will recuse himself from any dealings with Brookfield Asset Management, the New York-based conglomerate that paid him the equivalent of $9.8 million in stock options last December 31. The Opposition said Carney’s conflict was so glaring he should immediately dump all stock holdings: “Let’s say there’s a decision that will have a major impact on Brookfield.”

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Bring ‘Em Down! Say Donors

Donors to a defamation fund for Birju Dattani, ex-Liberal appointee to the Canadian Human Rights Commission, urge that he “free the world from Zionism” and “take them all down.” The comments were posted by donors to a crowdfunding site where Dattani is attempting to finance a libel suit against three Jewish defendants: “Bring them down!”

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