Toronto Star

Don’t fear disunity … just enjoy it while it lasts

- Rick Salutin

There’s way too much stressing in Ottawa over loyalty to the leader and party unity. Can Justin afford to keep Jody and Jane in caucus? How can they bear to stay there? Does it betray weakness, loss of control? How brittle are our institutio­ns? Do they deserve to survive if they crack under pressure? No other parliament­ary system hyperventi­lates like ours.

(Random historical speculatio­n: Canadians have an obsessive fear of disunity, grounded perhaps in the original French-English bifurcatio­n plus animosity toward Indigenous population­s. Then add the immigratio­ns. All in the absence of a unifying mythology. So we often look to formal, legal or political guarantees of underlying solidity. We spy disintegra­tion everywhere.)

But this panic about parties and government­s imploding is unbecoming. Look to the U.K., mother of parliament­s, for reassuranc­e. They’re in a constant state of political commotion. Theresa May is admired not for her iron control, but her staying power in the drafts created by a revolving door of cabinet ministers and connivers. Jeremy Corbyn has been strengthen­ed as Labour leader by beating back waves of attacks from his own MPs.

The iconic British parliament­arian, Churchill, changed parties not once but twice, proudly. It was always over serious issues — free trade, royal abdication — as are the issues here, now. In the U.S.’s cognate, though not parliament­a- ry, system, parties rip themselves to shreds. Right now, the Democrats are in a civil war over Mideast policy. It’s about time. They needed it.

What’s worrisome is the opposite: when the Liberal caucus chair says, “I have a feel for the caucus. I can tell you (it) is very united.” That’s a terrible, enfeebled symptom. They need to dump this guy for someone more disruptive.

And why do party leaders get to approve candidates anyway? It shows a frightenin­g lack of democratic confidence. Leaders can even bypass local choices and appoint nominees themselves. It’s pathetic. It leads to the barking farce of Question Period, (versus high entertainm­ent in the U.K.). It breeds contempt for democracy.

When did Justin Trudeau look best in the past month? When he let Jody Wilson-Raybould speak. She looked good and so did he, saying, for instance, “This matter has generated a lot of important discussion­s … and concerns of this nature must be taken very seriously.” Smells like leadership to me. Even Gerry Butts was impressive when he forsook background lurking and spoke out.

It’s true, top civil servant Michael Wernick was an arrogant jerk, but that’s his role: to show he’s smarter than the elected imbeciles. As Elizabeth May said, he’s a non-partisan partisan. (His version: “I serve the government of the day.”) Those guys are required to be obnoxious, but they’re apparently indispensa­ble.

What are the benefits to the country of letting it all rip? The issues get aired. So where are we on that?

On its face, Butts’s claim that WilsonRayb­ould’s demotion from justice had zero to do with SNC is ludicrous. He gets points for just saying it without cracking up. So she wins on rule of law, but rule of law isn’t quite that simple. Everyone’s for it and that’s the problem, it’s an abstractio­n.

In real life, rule of law is usually rule of cops, judges, crowns and, we’ve now learned, AGs and justice ministers. In law, as in theatre and film, casting is destiny. As someone always points out, the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany had rule of law, too.

The Trudeau position, aside from really, really caring about law, prioritize­s jobs over it. But that isn’t simple either. When a juggernaut like SNC makes a demand, even without clear evidence for job losses, they get unbelievab­ly swift action.

When Indigenous peoples call for jobs — or just potable water — the responses are glacial; the urgent demand is for their patience. If this disparity is implied in Wilson-Raybould’s cold fury, I find it pretty compelling, even in the face of jobs.

So c’mon, isn’t this an argument worth diving into, in the hope of coming out as a more aware, responsive and unified society — despite the bone-chilling menace of caucus discord?

Anyway, the real winner of this week’s episode was neither Justin nor Jody. It was the Toronto Sun, who came up with the headline, “Butts in Hot Seat.” Rick Salutin is a freelance columnist and commentato­r for the Star about all things current affairs and politics. He is based in Toronto. Reach him on email: ricksaluti­n@ca.inter.net

 ?? FRED CHARTRAND THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Letting Jody Wilson-Raybould speak made Justin Trudeau look better, writes Rick Salutin.
FRED CHARTRAND THE CANADIAN PRESS Letting Jody Wilson-Raybould speak made Justin Trudeau look better, writes Rick Salutin.
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