Regina Leader-Post

INPUT VITAL TO REFORMS

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After the acquittal of Saskatchew­an farmer Gerald Stanley in the death of Colten Boushie, many expected the prime minister to announce changes to the jury system. Instead, Justin Trudeau pledged quick, sweeping legislativ­e reforms across a broad array of policies governing Indigenous communitie­s.

Canadians want to improve the lives of First Nations, Metis and Inuit peoples. But the Boushie case, about which Trudeau has shown so much public concern, is also a warning that he must be cautious and precise, not carelessly exuberant, in transformi­ng his agenda into action.

The case exposed deep rifts between farmers and Indigenous people within a single community. The reasons these hostilitie­s exist are complex — but the story is repeated in many parts of Canada. Ignoring the reality of such profound ruptures, no matter who has the moral high ground, could easily undermine wellintent­ioned new laws. The prime minister must lay the groundwork for his legislatio­n carefully, not only with Indigenous Canadians, but with other citizens, many of whom know little about the culture and traditions guiding first peoples.

Here’s an example of the challenges Trudeau faces: self-government. Ask 10 Canadians what this means and it’s likely seven will respond: “Huh?” Among the remainder, there will be three different answers — and the ambiguity won’t be isolated to non-Indigenous folk. Or, ask Canadians to explain the “duty to consult and accommodat­e.” Indigenous leaders, government experts and courts wrestle with these concepts all the time, yet chances are most Canadians would be surprised at their meanings.

The prime minister wants to clarify such key principles, but he may face real backlash if there has been no appropriat­e public education or encouragem­ent of unfettered, open debate first. Declaring something the right thing to do isn’t the end of public input: it’s the beginning.

Even the most competent government would have trouble getting this agenda right. Regretfull­y, Team Trudeau has not been that beacon of accomplish­ment. Its national Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls is foundering. Only after repeated compliance orders from the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal did it begin closing the funding gap for on-reserve child welfare services.

Trudeau, rightly, wants to end the dysfunctio­n in Canada’s core relationsh­ip. But he must carry the whole country with him, respecting concerns and encouragin­g debate — lest he end up deepening fissures between communitie­s instead of healing them.

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