Tories warned of pitfalls in ‘values’ debate
Canada’s former ambassador for religious freedom is warning conservatives about the pitfalls of “Canadian values” talk.
At the annual Manning Centre Conference in Ottawa Saturday, Andrew Bennett said “values” language — like that cropping up in the Conservative party leadership race — must be debunked.
“When people bandy about an expression like ‘Canadian values,’ they will ascribe all kinds of different things to that, things that can be contested,” he said.
Elaborating on that idea in an interview, Bennett told the National Post Canadians should focus on universal concepts: rule of law, human rights and freedoms. “When you get into the ‘values’ language, it’s fraught with a lot of pitfalls,” he said, and specific “values” beyond those all Canadians can accept shouldn’t be prescribed.
Bennett said his views aren’t political and he hasn’t followed the Conservative leadership race closely, but the “values” debate has permeated the contest.
Kellie Leitch’s opponents have largely rejected her rhetoric around immigration interviews, and the idea all immigrants should be tested for “Canadian values,” with some accusing her of sowing division and inciting hatred.
Leitch has connected such ideas to protecting Canada against terrorism and, specifically, Islamist terrorists, although she has also repeated that she believes hate speech is wrong.
Her message resonates with some in the Conservative base who feel their concerns have been muzzled by a Liberal government that preaches inclusivity.
In Bennett’s view, “values” talk confuses, however, and religious freedom should be defended. Bennett was ambassador for religious freedom and ran the Office of Religious Freedom within Global Affairs Canada from 2013 until the Liberal government dismantled it about a year ago. Now, he is a senior fellow with Cardus, a faithbased think-tank that does work on religious freedom.
He expounded on the virtues of plurality to a room of about 70 conference attendees Saturday morning. The talk followed several sessions Friday that had been devoted specifically to the issue of Islamist extremism, part of a weekend agenda largely focused on populist sentiments that led to Brexit and the rise of Donald Trump.
“To champion religious freedom is also to implicitly accept that there are those in our common life who will hold and will promote beliefs, theological and philosophical, moral and ethical, that many of us will vehemently reject,” Bennett said. “And that’s OK. It’s OK to oppose. It’s OK to differ.”
But “marginalization of people of faith and the beliefs they possess,” he said, “leads to an impoverishment of our public debate.” And, he told the room during a Q&A session, hate speech provisions in the Canadian criminal code are “essential” in cases where any group incites hatred and violence.
Moreover, Bennett told the Post, a major lack of understanding about Islam has underpinned recent debate over an anti-Islamophobia motion in the House of Commons.
“I think we should absolutely stand against anti-Islamic bias and anti-Islamic statements. And if the House of Commons wants to pass a motion in that regard, that’s great. That’s a good thing. I think it’s also important to recognize that we need to stand up against any type of anti-religious bias,” Bennett said, noting, for example, that anti-Semitism persists in Canada.
Conservative MPs, including Leitch and most other leadership candidates — Michael Chong going against the grain to vote in favour — have come out against a Liberal MP’s motion condemning Islamophobia (fear of Muslims and their faith, put literally) and calling for a parliamentary committee study. A Conservative version of the motion that included other faiths was defeated by the government last week.
Some rhetoric around opposition to the original motion, M-103, includes fears over some kind of universal imposition of “Shariah law” and encroachment of free speech.
“I think there’s a general ignorance about what Shariah law is. In Canada, there are many different religious communities that have religious law,” Bennett said, comparing Shariah to Roman Catholic canon law or Jewish Halakha law.
“The presence of Muslim communities in this country is a growing fact so we need to be informed. We need to be well-educated,” Bennett said.
“We need to be very careful when we start making all sorts of grand statements, and I think we need to do this in a very measured and reasoned fashion.”