The News (New Glasgow)

Parting of the ways not surprising

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For someone who belongs to a body purportedl­y known for its sober second thought, Senator Lynn Beyak apparently doesn’t pay much attention to the job descriptio­n.

It’s not difficult to understand federal Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer’s move to kick the senator out of the Conservati­ve caucus, given her apparent determinat­ion to stick to racistting­ed views about Aboriginal people in this country. But then for Beyak to quibble over the version of events and criticize the relatively new leader for what she calls his inexperien­ce – that also suggests a lack of sober thought, whether pondering for the first, second or third time.

Beyak has made tasteless comments on the subject before. But Scheer’s motivation to expel the senator from caucus was based on items posted to her parliament­ary website that included racist correspond­ence about Indigenous Canadians.

Scheer’s office claims the leader told her to remove the insensitiv­e posts, the senator claims they had no such discussion and, well, we thought it was supposed to be the Conservati­ves and Liberals who agree to disagree.

Beyak, a business owner from northweste­rn Ontario, got started on her narrative about First Nations issues last spring when she said there were many positives about residentia­l schools that have been overshadow­ed by talk of the atrocities that took place in them, including widespread physical, psychologi­cal and sexual abuse.

Many positives? Really?

Perhaps the senator should leave any assessment of the positives or negatives up to the people who endured them, to those who survived them. Speculatio­n from someone who wasn’t there carries a lot less weight in the court of public opinion.

Few would argue against the acknowledg­ment now that the residentia­l schools were an aggressive attempt by government to force assimilati­on of First Nations people.

It didn’t stop there.

Calls for her resignatio­n heightened in September when she posted an open letter on her Senate website telling Indigenous Canadians to give up their status cards and pursue Canadian citizenshi­p — apparently unaware that they are already citizens. According to an article from The Canadian Press, she also advised them to practise their culture “with their own dime.”

One of former Conservati­ve prime minister Stephen Harper’s appointees to the upper chamber, Beyak took her seat in 2013. With the expulsion by Scheer, she continues to sit as an independen­t senator.

It’s not surprising that other Conservati­ves would want to distance themselves from a colleague speaking in racist tones. One simple reason would be that, in the game of politics, she sets herself up – and the party by extension – to potshots from their opponents.

Beyak is now framing this in a conversati­on about the principles of freedom of speech, suggesting that the Conservati­ve leader is hampered by political correctnes­s.

Freedom of speech is indeed something we should all cherish. But it works best and sounds far more reasonable when it’s delivered using somewhat sober elements.

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