Journal Pioneer

CRITICS DENOUNCE DISDAIN FOR RULE OF LAW IN ONT., U.S.

Critics denounce disdain for rule of law in Ontario, U.S.

- BY JAMES MCCARTEN

Maybe the White House and the Pink Palace have something in common.

Inside the rosy sandstone walls of the Ontario legislatur­e, opposition critics were up in arms over a Toronto Star report in which anonymous Conservati­ve insiders accused Dean French, Premier Doug Ford’s chief of staff, of trying to interfere in police investigat­ions of illegal cannabis outlets when marijuana was legalized in Canada last month. That same day, Americans learned that President Donald Trump wanted the U.S. Justice Department to pursue prosecutio­ns of two of his political targets: former Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton and fired FBI director James Comey.

Both reports struck a similar chord: two anti-establishm­ent leaders, each known for an unconventi­onal approach to governing, seeking to defy longstandi­ng political convention­s that frown on exerting political influence on the independen­t machinery of law enforcemen­t. Whether it’s because of a lack of awareness of those convention­s, or outright contempt for them, it’s disturbing either way, said Jamie Cameron, a professor of constituti­onal law at York University’s Osgoode Hall law school.

“What we see in Ontario and the U.S. is profound disregard, or ignorance, of the rule of law and basic principles of democratic governance,” she said.

“The populist notion that simply being elected entitles a premier or president to exercise unbridled authority - either flouting the law or without regard to it - because it will make America great or is in the name of the Ontario people threatens the foundation of democracy: that we are a government of laws and not of men or women.” During the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, Trump famously promised a special-counsel investigat­ion into Clinton’s use of a private email server during her tenure as secretary of state - a controvers­y that resurfaced in Washington this week following revelation­s that Ivanka Trump, the president’s assistant and daughter, had used a private email account for government business.

“There was no anything, just innocent emails,” Trump said Thursday. “It’s another fake news story.”

He fired Comey from the FBI last year - initially, he said, on the recommenda­tion of his attorney general, although it later became clear that Trump was frustrated over a host of issues, including the agency’s handling of the Clinton email investigat­ion, the ongoing probe of his campaign’s ties to Russia and what White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders described as Comey’s “lying, leaking and politicizi­ng the FBI.”

Earlier this year, Trump broached the idea of ordering the Justice Department to take action with Don McGahn, who was White House counsel at the time, the New York Times reported Tuesday. McGahn reportedly told the president he had no such authority, and even requisitio­ned a memo to explain the potential legal and political consequenc­es.

In the case of Ontario’s premier, it remains unclear whether Ford knew anything of his chief of staff’s ultimately unsuccessf­ul orders to senior political aides asking them to direct police to raid outlaw cannabis shops on Oct. 17, the day federal legalizati­on of cannabis took effect.

 ?? CP PHPOTO ?? Inside the rosy sandstone walls of the Ontario legislatur­e, opposition critics were up in arms over a Toronto Star report in which anonymous Conservati­ve insiders accused Dean French, Premier Doug Ford’s chief of staff, of trying to interfere in police investigat­ions of illegal cannabis outlets when marijuana was legalized in Canada last month. French stands behind a curtain as he listens to introducti­ons at the Ontario PC Convention in Toronto, last week.
CP PHPOTO Inside the rosy sandstone walls of the Ontario legislatur­e, opposition critics were up in arms over a Toronto Star report in which anonymous Conservati­ve insiders accused Dean French, Premier Doug Ford’s chief of staff, of trying to interfere in police investigat­ions of illegal cannabis outlets when marijuana was legalized in Canada last month. French stands behind a curtain as he listens to introducti­ons at the Ontario PC Convention in Toronto, last week.

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