Policy

Beyond the Election, the China Card

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They come along from time to time. Politician­s who change the dialogue, change how the political conversati­on is conducted, whose influence outlasts their time in office and sets the benchmarks against which people then measure success. In Canada two come easily to mind. Pierre Trudeau changed Canada so that no future prime minister would be unable to speak French. One result was that when Trudeau’s time ran out, bilingual Brian Mulroney was chosen, in 1983, to lead the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Party, becoming the only Quebec native to lead that party to two majority government­s.

For his part, Mulroney then changed the economic dialogue in the country. Canada had been growing increasing­ly nationalis­t economical­ly. Mulroney championed free trade with the United States and won re-election in 1988 election doing so. The Liberals who had opposed free trade and fought against it in the election then became the North American Free Trade Agreement’s biggest champions when they formed government in 1993.

Margaret Thatcher changed the political dialogue in Britain when she became prime minister in 1979. Thirty years later, much of the change she wrought still resonates. And in the US, Ronald Reagan upended almost 50 years of American political thinking stretching from the New Deal in the 1930s with the conservati­ve ideas he espoused though didn’t necessaril­y always follow.

Now we have another American president who has changed the game. Donald Trump is seeking re-election this fall. Whether or not he wins he has impacted the American political discourse in ways that may live on even if he loses to Joe Biden, a more intelligen­t, more capable and more reasonable successor.

The fact is that most politician­s who change the dialogue arrive at a time when the dialogue is starting to change anyway. In many ways, they are facilitato­rs rather than innovators. Donald Trump has been that in spades, going far beyond where much of the American public has been, but neverthele­ss advancing familiar themes which have been growing in the American psyche for many years.

So, Canadians shouldn’t expect an instant revival of the “special relationsh­ip” that Trump has so derided, notwithsta­nding the negotiatin­g success of the new NAFTA. The capricious tariffs on Canadian aluminum he has imposed to help his re-election effort may not suddenly disappear. And don’t expect the American security umbrella to suddenly unfold again across Canada with the anti-ballistic missile system protecting targets in our country as well as the US On missile defence, we will actually have to sign on and pony up a percentage of the cost to be covered.

And most importantl­y, America-China tensions will intensify. This will have ramificati­ons for the entire world, but particular­ly for Canada. Trump is building his re-election campaign around confrontin­g China. Canada is already caught in the middle of the dispute, detaining Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou on an extraditio­n request from the US, while China holds two Canadians—Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig— seized in retaliatio­n.

As Canada confronts the challenges of this new world, now is the time for this country to change its political dialogue. It doesn’t necessaril­y take a change in personalit­ies but it does take a change from the “feel good” Canada to the “be real” Canada. China and the US and their disputes provide the first opportunit­y to do that.

The Meng case is not primarily a legal one as the government has treated it. It is a geopolitic­al one in which Canada as well as the two principal players have a stake. Beijing is eager to have Meng back and are playing hardball to get her. We should play hardball back. The Chinese don’t participat­e in simultaneo­us release of people being detained because they think they lose face. Well, this time we should tell them they will have to release the Canadians simultaneo­usly with Meng or they won’t get her back.

If the exchange happens, the Americans will be annoyed. But when the exchange is complete, we will be able to do what we already want to; exclude Huawei from our 5G wireless network as the US wants. That will make Washington happy.

To follow that course would be to make our own foreign policy. Ultimately in a US-China confrontat­ion we are on the American side. But we can try to be on it on our own terms. Whomever wins in the United States in November is going to create challenges for Canada. But if we meet them on our own conditions, that can be a tremendous opportunit­y as well.

Columnist Don Newman, Executive Vice President of Rubicon Strategies in Ottawa, is a lifetime member of the Parliament­ary Press Gallery.

The principles and practices of First Nations self-policing are informed by spirituali­ty, nature, history and, above all, relational­ity—the concept of being in “right relations” with those around you. At a time when convention­al policing practices are producing especially alarming outcomes for Black and Indigenous people amid a worldwide outcry for reform, First Nations justice provides an alternativ­e approach that works.

sila (Frank Brown), a hereditary chief of the Heiltsuk First Nation on the north coast of British Columbia, has made extraordin­ary contributi­ons to the health and well-being of his people. But his life could have turned out very differentl­y. At 14, sila was convicted of armed robbery and was about to be sent away to juvenile detention when his family requested that Heiltsuk law be followed instead. As a result, the young man was exiled to an island within Heiltsuk territory, to reflect on his crime, to learn his own traditions, and to heal.

sila credits this interventi­on for turning his life around.

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