National Post

Outrage & opportunit­y

WHAT HAPPENED TO PATRICK BROWN WAS OUTRAGEOUS. IT’S ALSO A CHANCE FOR THE ONTARIO TORIES TO REGAIN POWER.

- CONRAD BLACK

The sudden departure of Patrick Brown as leader of the Ontario Progressiv­e Conservati­ves (as they still call themselves) is a sadness, an outrage and an opportunit­y.

It is a sad departure of a man who had worked hard to build his party, recruited good candidates, and was regarded by most polls as a hot contender to win the next provincial election. He had earned a try to dislodge this abusive, incompeten­t fourterm apotheosis of the decay of incumbency that rules in Queen’s Park. I don’t know Patrick Brown well, but I wish him well, and urge him to remain as a member of the provincial legislatur­e and stick to his position that the allegation­s against him of sexual impropriet­ies are untrue, if that is his conviction. The future could yet reserve to him an important government position. His political career has taken the worst possible turn but sometimes political fortunes fluctuate upward.

Patrick Brown’s fate is an outrage because there was no process, due or otherwise, merely two unsubstant­iated and anonymous denunciati­ons; and there was no sympathy for the accused, no concern for any sort of justice, only cowardly, hip- shooting congratula­tions from Justin Trudeau in Davos and from Premier Kathleen Wynne and provincial NDP Leader Andrea Horwath, lauding Brown’s accusers for their “bravery.” When asked by a journalist about due process ( a subject that, unsurprisi­ngly, arouses little interest in the media, which rarely practice it themselves), Horwath’s reply was two words: “Jian Ghomeshi.” The fact that Ghomeshi was acquitted in a meticulous­ly conducted and argued trial, after being condemned in the media by everyone except Christie Blatchford, Barbara Amiel Black ( my wife) and me, does not open in Horwath’s thoughts, such as they are, the possibilit­y that he might not have been guilty.

Never mind that the defence tore the testimony of his accusers to pieces, that some of them simply lied, and that Ghomeshi was exonerated. The New Democratic Party historical­ly has an impressive record of defending the rights of the accused, but Andrea Horwath holds that the acquittal of Jian Ghomeshi legitimize­s a regime of conclusive denunciati­on that is neither justiciabl­e nor appealable. If a woman accuses a man of a sexual transgress­ion, he’s cooked — Horwath does the Red Queen one better: not just the verdict before the charge and the evidence; the charge is the verdict and there is no evidence. We just ruin the career of the leader of the opposition and destabiliz­e his political party five months before an election because of anonymous claims of the suggestion of oral sex but with no followthro­ugh when the aggrieved party demurred, and a stolen kiss and intimate embrace, which, when the subject of these attentions objected, ended with Brown driving her home.

Have we all, as a society, gone mad? Are our elected l eaders all i nvertebrat­e, vote- hunting panderers to belligeren­t, man-hating feminists? We are in a bloodless replicatio­n of the Prairial phase of the French Revolution. The Trudeau-WynneHorwa­th Committee of Public Safety makes or receives a denunciati­on, declares the subject of it to be “outside the law,” and that individual vanishes. ( This was a wheeze of the leader of the French Terror, Robespierr­e, which was soon used by his intended victims to send him to a swift public execution.) A beastly mutation of bourgeois sentimenta­lity such as an acquittal in a fair trial is irrelevant.

I know Justin Trudeau to be a fair- minded person, and I understand the allure of faddish concentrat­ions of electoral strength, as these rabid feminists now are. But he is the leader of a G7 country with as enviable a record of humane and condign justice as any country. He knows better than to greet the instant destructio­n of a prominent political career on unsubstant­iated claims of minor indiscreti­ons with joy on behalf of the accusers. That is not how his father reacted to the indictment of his cabinet colleague Bryce Mackasey on financial char- ges (he was acquitted).

Of course, everyone has to be protected from assault and unreasonab­le obstructio­n or harassment. Men must always be scrupulous and civil with all women, and suspected wrongdoers should be prosecuted, but fairly.

I doubt that there are many male Canadians above the age of 40 who have never committed acts similar to those alleged against Patrick Brown, including Justin and me, though not involving women who were subordinat­e. Sex motivates most people at times — sometimes the response is positive and sometimes not, but they are not usually consequent­ial, much less unlawful, acts. And these laudations of the courage of the accusers are getting a little tiresome; it doesn’t take much courage to come out of the woodwork of the past and accuse a public person of minor i mproprieti­es years ago with no supportive evidence and with the cloak of total anonymity. Ultimately, the principal duty of every public official is to protect the rights of all the people. Patrick Brown vigorously denies that he did what is claimed, and this episode should be irrelevant to his ability to lead a political party now. Besmirchin­g and deposing him in a putsch like this, given the absence of support from his caucus, may indi- cate that he is not Alexander the Great or Napoleon as a leader of men, but it is still an injustice.

The opportunit­y created by this incident is filling the vacancy. None of those judged less desirable than Patrick Brown three years ago should now replace him. New blood is available, particular­ly Doug Ford, Caroline Mulroney Lapham and Rod Phillips. Doug Ford is a friend and a good man. But he is indelibly identified with municipal controvers­ies in Toronto, where he lost the mayoralty in 2014 by barely 60,000 votes out of 980,000 cast, to John Tory, who ran what was effectivel­y a Liberal- Conservati­ve coalition. ( Ford ran over 100,000 votes ahead of NDP’s pref erred candidate Olivia Chow). The Ford faction is strong and must be welcomed into the provincial party, but the distinct nature of that faction makes its elevation to leadership of a winning, provincewi­de coalition problemati­c.

Rod Phillips is an able man and he is not complicit in the management errors that afflicted the company that publishes the National Post when he was the chairman. But his is not a widely known name and he has chosen a challengin­g constituen­cy ( Ajax). I wish him every success and he should have a brilliant political future, but leadership for him, at this time, seems a stretch.

Caroline Mulroney, in a slogan of Richard Nixon’s from 1968, “is the one;” she should be the next leader of the Ontario Progressiv­e Conservati­ves and of the province. She is an alumna of Harvard and New York University, a lawyer and an ac- complished businesswo­man, perfectly bilingual, elegant and glamorous without being any the less a determined woman: strong but not overbearin­g, beautiful but not, as the ghastly jargon goes, objectifia­ble. Her suave and highly intelligen­t husband, Andrew Lapham, a financier, scion of a distinguis­hed intellectu­al (though not conservati­ve) family, would not only not be overshadow­ed by his wife’s success, he would be a star. In fact, he would be the greatest male consort of an elected leader since the great Sir Denis Thatcher, backbone of the British nation — cricket, gin and tonic, El Alamein, internatio­nal businessma­n and Churchilli­an Tory.

Obviously, Ms. Mulroney Lapham has l earned the ropes politicall­y from her father ( disclosure: a dear and unwavering friend of 53 years). Going for the Ontario PC leadership now would not be as bold as her father’s run for the federal party leadership in 1976, when he was a 36- year- old lawyer who had never sought public office — she is a nominated candidate in a promising district ( YorkSimcoe). The clinching argument is that she would win the election and clean house after the fiscal profligacy of Dalton McGuinty, the political sorcery of David Axelrod, and the McGuinty- Wynne economic miracle that has turned one of the wealthiest jurisdicti­ons in the world into a debt- ridden candidate for equalizati­on payments. Ford, Phillips, possibly Brown, and others would make it a strong team. The office seeks the woman and she should have it.

BROWN’S FATE IS AN OUTRAGE BECAUSE THERE WAS NO PROCESS, DUE OR OTHERWISE.

 ?? DAVE ABEL / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Patrick Brown had earned a try to dislodge the government of Premier Kathleen Wynne, writes Conrad Black.
DAVE ABEL / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Patrick Brown had earned a try to dislodge the government of Premier Kathleen Wynne, writes Conrad Black.
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