Penticton Herald

MPs display small minds

Murder of a bus driver is nothing to laugh about

- —Victoria Times Colonist

Regardless of what some Conservati­ve MPs might think, the country would be better off if we elected more bus drivers to represent us in Parliament.

As Amarjeet Sohi, the minister of infrastruc­ture and Liberal MP for Edmonton Mill Woods, rose in Parliament to respond to a question from a Conservati­ve MP about public transit, he expressed his shock and concern that a bus driver in Winnipeg had been stabbed to death that day.

“Mr. Speaker, as a former bus driver, I want to convey our thoughts and prayers,” Sohi said. Conservati­ve MPs, it seems, found that funny — loud laughter could be heard from the Opposition benches.

Assuming the Tory MPs were not laughing at the news that a bus driver had been killed while on duty, we can only surmise that they were amused that a former bus driver could be elected to Parliament. Sohi’s response was suitably dignified. “I take pride in my background,” he said. “I think it does demonstrat­e a streak of elitist attitude in the Conservati­ve party, where maybe they don’t appreciate we have working-class people in Parliament in the Liberal government who are making a difference in the lives of Canadians.”

Conservati­ve House leader Candice Bergen refused to censure the scornful MPs or apologize for their disrespect­ful behaviour, other than saying: “We absolutely respect and honour all of the jobs that we’ve done, and the experience we bring to this House.”

There are occasional low points in parliament­ary discourse — this was one of them. If some MPs find it laughable that someone drove a bus for a living, what do they think of other blue-collar occupation­s? Do they subscribe to a career class system?

Their derisive laughter was not a commentary on bus driving, but a sad reflection on how easily well-paid politician­s lose touch with reality.

Parliament­ary video does not show which MPs were laughing, and that’s a pity. They should be held accountabl­e before their constituen­ts and the nation for their contemptib­le behaviour. While they are guilty of stereotypi­ng a certain type of career, they are also furthering the stereotype of entitled, arrogant politician­s whose main purpose is to get elected so they can live in comfort and collect a fat pension.

Let’s consider, for a moment, the merits of electing a bus driver to public office. Bus drivers obtain their positions after rigorous training and strict licensing. They get their jobs through merit and ability, not through political connection­s and who owes them favours. To keep their jobs, they must perform to a certain standard.

Bus drivers have daily contact with the public. They hear from people when fares go up, so they have a firsthand understand­ing of cost-of-living issues. They see daily the good and the bad of humanity, the sad and the happy. They know vastly more about the nitty-gritty realities of life than do most politician­s.

Bus drivers must be aware of what’s happening on both the left and the right, and their decisions are based on what is proper and safe. In setting out on a prescribed route, a bus driver makes a tacit promise to follow that route correctly, courteousl­y, safely and on time. Rarely is that promise not fulfilled.

Instead of laughing at bus drivers, those easily amused and small-minded MPs should be learning from them.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada