Edmonton Journal

Western think-tank lauds Trudeau’s Senate gambit

- JOAN BRYDEN

OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau’s decision to boot senators out of the Liberal caucus is being hailed as more in Western Canada’s interests than Stephen Harper’s “misguided” efforts to democratiz­e the unelected chamber.

And that verdict is coming from a most surprising quarter: a think-tank that has championed an elected Senate for decades and is based in the prime minister’s hometown, Calgary.

The irony of the Canada West Foundation endorsing Trudeau’s plan for Senate reform while criticizin­g Harper’s is almost jaw-dropping.

The West, and Alberta in particular, has been a political wasteland for the Liberals since Trudeau’s father, Pierre, imposed the reviled National Energy Program in 1980.

Indeed, with expulsion of appointed senators, Trudeau’s Liberal caucus now includes a scant four representa­tives from the western provinces — none at all from Alberta.

Harper, by contrast, began his political career as a Reformer, a western-based party that championed the idea of a Triple-E Senate — in sync with the Canada West Foundation’s campaign for an upper house that was elected, effective and with equal representa­tion from each province.

But Harper, a one-time darling of Senate reformers, has since fallen afoul of the foundation with his proposal to hold “consultati­ve elections” for Senate nominees — without altering the seat distributi­on in the Senate, which grossly overrepres­ents the Atlantic Provinces and grossly under-represents the western provinces if the size of the population is taken into account.

The foundation initially supported Harper’s proposal but subsequent­ly had second thoughts.

“Moving only to an elected, or single E Senate, legitimize­s an institutio­n that is deeply undemocrat­ic in its representa­tion,” foundation president Dylan Jones said in a written statement Thursday.

“An elected Senate alone will not help the West be heard in Ottawa. In fact, it will diminish its voice.”

Jones said Trudeau’s move, aimed at restoring the Senate to its intended purpose of providing independen­t, sober second thought, “is a more logical course than the misguided effort to legitimize the chamber through Senate elections.

“It is ironic that this action to (intentiona­lly or unintentio­nally) address the interests of the West was taken by Trudeau,” he observed.

Jones praised Trudeau for taking “the first concrete step in decades that moves the red chamber closer to being the institutio­n of sober second thought its defenders claim it is.

Jones said it would be best to simply eliminate the Senate “but Trudeau’s course of action is at least doable and an improvemen­t.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, in Vancouver Friday, is being praised for his Senate decision from an unlikely direction.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, in Vancouver Friday, is being praised for his Senate decision from an unlikely direction.

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