Edmonton Journal

Resignatio­n stirs both pride and sadness

Wilson-raybould highlights dilemmas female, indigenous politician­s can face

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On Feb. 12, the day after her last meeting with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, the Honourable Jody Wilson-Raybould resigned from cabinet, signing “Puglaas” — her Kwak’wala name — and retained no less than the Honourable Thomas Cromwell, a former Supreme Court justice, to advise her on what she may speak about.

The 2015 election of the Trudeau Liberals was accompanie­d by much fanfare and rhetoric about the new political era, one marked by positive and inclusive approaches (“sunny ways”), respect for reconcilia­tion with Indigenous peoples, open government, a retreat from the concentrat­ion of prime ministeria­l power in the prime minister’s office, and the deployment of feminist principles.

The newly elected Vancouver-Granville MP and then the first Indigenous minister of justice, Wilson-Raybould, was paraded like a prize trophy as evidence of all of these things.

Fast-forward to 2019, and the trophy has become a target. Her alleged resistance to pressure from the PMO in the prosecutio­n playbook for SNC-Lavalin by inference resulted in her very public discipline by the prime minister in the form of her demotion to Veterans’ Affairs in an otherwise mundane mini-cabinet shuffle.

In a statement at that time on her MP web page, she wrote: “The role of the Attorney General of Canada carries with it unique responsibi­lities to uphold the rule of law and the administra­tion of justice, and as such demands a measure of principled independen­ce. It is a pillar of our democracy that our system of justice be free from even the perception of political interferen­ce and uphold the highest levels of public confidence. As such, it has always been my view that the Attorney General of Canada must be non-partisan, more transparen­t in the principles that are the basis of decisions, and, in this respect, always willing to speak truth to power.”

Meanwhile, certain Liberal pundits who evidently didn’t get the sunny-feminist-ways memo have been indulging in character assassinat­ion, running a whisper campaign that Wilson-Raybould is not a team player, is difficult — one even said on the CBC that she is reputed to be incompeten­t.

This feels very familiar to many women across the country, now rolling their eyes, recognizin­g this for the stereotypi­cal cheap shots against women who beg to differ.

Ah, the politics of symbolism. Perhaps Trudeau et al. forgot that the MP for Vancouver-Granville is a powerful political and profession­al actor in her own right. She has a heritage of illustriou­s politician­s in the Kwakwaka’wakw Nation. She has served as Crown prosecutor in British Columbia, as a treaty commission­er, and as regional chief of the Assembly of First Nations, places where competence and political acumen are valued.

Her public contributi­ons are likely far from over. She is not someone to be messed with and she’s nobody’s trophy. The inferred antics in the PMO — the parameters of which many are interested in knowing — have cost the federal government its first Indigenous woman justice minister, and may cost Vancouver-Granville its MP.

It seems unlikely she would choose to run again or that the current leader of the federal Liberals would sign her nomination papers.

In the ashes of all of this, we may find some smoking residue suggesting causes of this particular political firestorm, helping us to comprehend exactly how politics and power are currently deployed, for whom, and at whose cost. And in this matter, we’ve all lost.

The merits of participat­ing in mainstream electoral politics are complicate­d for Indigenous people. Wilson-Raybould’s choice to participat­e in partisan politics wasn’t universall­y supported in Indian Country, which has little trust in and fewer reasons to support mainstream political parties and government­s.

Nor was her every stance supported by all Indigenous people. Her positionin­g in Trudeau’s government was as much liability as asset in Indian Country.

For we signatorie­s, this is both a sad and proud moment. We are troubled by the rolling train of toxic federal politics and by the treatment of one of our own, an accomplish­ed Indigenous woman who chose to contribute to mainstream politics. We are proud of her record, her integrity, her principles, and we wish her well.

Joyce Green, University of Regina; Gina Starblanke­t, University of Calgary; Heidi Kiiwetinep­inesiik Stark, University of Victoria; Renae Watchman, Mount Royal University; Sarah Hunt, University of British Columbia; Lianne Marie Leda Charlie, Yukon College; Christine O’Bonsawin, University of Victoria; waaseyaa’sin Christine Sy, University of Victoria; Jeff Corntassel, University of Victoria; Patricia M. Barkaskas, University of British Columbia; Dallas Hunt, University of Manitoba; Veldon Coburn, Carleton University; Robyn Bourgeois, Brock University; Sarah Nickel, University of Saskatchew­an; Mary Jane McCallum, University of Winnipeg; Damien Lee, Ryerson University; Chelsea Gabel, McMaster University.

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