CBC Edition

Brian Mulroney's complicate­d relationsh­ip with Indigenous peoples in Canada

- Peter Zimonjic

The late Brian Mulroney's legacy with Indigenous peoples in Canada is marked by its contradic‐ tions - failures remem‐ bered for their good inten‐ tions, successes accompa‐ nied by catastroph­ic disap‐ pointments.

The former prime minis‐ ter is praised by some Indige‐ nous leaders for creating a Royal Commission on Aborig‐ inal peoples, for recognizin­g Métis people and for the suc‐ cessful negotiatio­ns that led to the creation of Nunavut.

But for others, those achievemen­ts pale in com‐ parison with his governmen‐ t's failure to deliver self-gov‐ ernment during constituti­on‐ al talks in the 1980s, and the 1990 Oka Crisis that bloodied Canada's reputation on the world stage.

"Don't underestim­ate how traumatic Oka was for Indige‐ nous peoples," said Robert Falcon Ouellette, a former Liberal MP, now an associate professor at the University of Ottawa, who is from the Red Pheasant Cree Nation in Saskatchew­an.

"It was a disaster among Indigenous relations. It laid bare to Indigenous peoples the military and the structur‐ al biases and discrimina­tion in the state that will be used against Indigenous peoples."

Not long after assuming office as Canada's 18th prime minister in September of 1984, Mulroney took his first steps in a multi-year effort to tackle the issue of Indige‐ nous self government.

The 1982 Constituti­on Act, which repatriate­d the Consti‐ tution and enacted the Charter of Rights and Free‐ doms, required that the prime minister and premiers meet in Ottawa to define the rights of Indigenous peoples in Canada within a year of its passage.

Former prime minister Pierre Trudeau presided over the 1983 and 1984 talks, while Mulroney hosted the 1985 and 1987 talks. They ended without reaching a deal on Indigenous self-gov‐ ernment.

The constituti­onal talks of the 1980s

David Crombie, who served as Mulroney's minister of In‐ dian Affairs and Northern Developmen­t from Septem‐ ber 17, 1984 until June 29, 1986, told CBC News that while Mulroney's proposals were rejected by some provinces, he tried his best.

"He thought he was doing the right thing," Crombie said. "He wanted to do the right thing but as anybody knows who deals in the field, it's a complex field and … it didn't didn't pass muster for some people."

At the close of the 1987 conference, Métis leader Jim Sinclair told Mulroney and the gathered premiers that the conference had been a failure and questioned whether the goodwill re‐ quired to reach a deal had been there in the first place.

"We have the right to selfgovern­ment, to self-determi‐ nation and land," he said. "This is not an end, it's only a beginning … Don't worry, prime minister and premiers of the provinces. I may be gone but my people will be back."

WATCH: The late Jim Sin‐ clair addressing the First Ministers Conference in 1978:

The next round of consti‐ tutional talks centred on the

Meech Lake Accord, Mul‐ roney's effort to bring Que‐ bec into the Constituti­on by strengthen­ing provincial powers and declaring Que‐ bec a distinct society.

While the deal proposed constituti­onal amendments that would keep Quebec in Canada, it was fiercely op‐ posed by Indigenous leaders who said it ignored their rights.

In 1990, Manitoba Indige‐ nous leader Elijah Harper, the only Indigenous Manito‐ ba MLA at the time, withheld his consent for the Meech Lake Accord, preventing it from coming to a vote in the province and leading to the accord's eventual failure.

Canada's first Indigenous Governor General, Mary May Simon, told CBC News Net‐ work's Power & Politics in an interview airing Monday that "Meech Lake was a difficult time for Indigenous, or Abo‐ riginal peoples as we were called then."

WATCH | Governor Gen‐ eral on Mulroney's legacy for Indigenous people:

"There was not a lot of time given to Indigenous leaders to participat­e in Meech Lake … but there was a different, I think, attitude during the Charlottet­own Ac‐ cord negotiatio­ns."

Mulroney's next attempt to solve the constituti­onal question, the 1991 Charlotte‐ town Accord, included a clause affirming Indigenous Canadians had an "inherent right of self government."

Tony Belcourt, the first president of the Native Coun‐ cil of Canada and the Métis Nation of Ontario, partici‐ pated in those discussion­s. He described Mulroney as someone who had "a soft spot for Indigenous peoples

and native people in particu‐ lar."

"In the Charlottet­own round in particular, the Métis won big - and I mean big," Belcourt told CBC News.

Recognitio­n of the Métis, Louis Riel

Mulroney called a referen‐ dum in October of 1992, putting the Charlottet­own Ac‐ cord to the electorate. It failed by a vote of 55 to 45 per cent.

Despite the failure of the Charlottet­own Accord, a mo‐ tion introduced by Mul‐ roney's government in Parlia‐ ment in March of 1992 - rec‐ ognizing the Red River Métis and Louis Riel as a founder of Manitoba - helped Mul‐ roney retain the affections of the Métis people.

After Mulroney's death, David Chartrand, president of the Manitoba Métis Feder‐ ation and the National Gov‐ ernment of the Red River Métis, showered praise on the former Conservati­ve prime minister.

"There can also be no doubt that Brian Mulroney was decades ahead of his time in pursuing reconcilia‐ tion with Indigenous peo‐ ples," Chartrand said in a media statement.

Belcourt said that among the Métis, Brian Mulroney is held in the "highest regard."

"His legacy with us, as far as I'm concerned, I don't know how that's going to be topped in terms of prime ministers," he said.

Oka and Nunavut

It's perhaps ironic that one of Mulroney's best-remem‐ bered successes with Indige‐ nous policy and an episode often referred to as his greatest failure unfolded at the same time.

In April of 1990, Mulroney signed the Nunavut land claim agreement-in-principle in Igloolik, Nunavut after years of negotiatio­ns. The fi‐ nal agreement was signed three years later and was rat‐ ified by Parliament in July 1993, leading to the creation of the new territory in 1999.

Paul Quassa, the premier of Nunavut from 2017 to 2018 and the Tungavik Feder‐ ation of Nunavut's chief ne‐ gotiator during the talks to create Nunavut, told CBC News those talks were suc‐ cessful in large part because of Mulroney's ability to un‐ derstand the "uniqueness of the Inuit."

"I believe for Inuit and for us he was one that was more flexible in what we were look‐ ing for through our land claims negotiatio­ns," Quassa told CBC News.

"Look where we are now. Our territory is one fifth of Canada. With a small number of Inuit in this area, we changed the map of Canada and this was under the gov‐ ernment of Mulroney."

Quassa said Inuit elders have a custom of giving tradi‐ tional names to "very impor‐ tant people." Because of Mul‐ roney's efforts on their be‐ half - and his pronounced chin - he was given the affec‐ tionate Inuktitut name Talluq, which Quassa said means "the chin."

"He had that distinct smile and face and you could tell that chin … was there to hold on to that smile," he said.

Far to the South, in Oka Quebec, it was a much differ‐ ent story. A 300-year-old land dispute re-ignited when Oka's municipal council voted to approve a golf course expansion on land claimed by the Mohawks of Kanesatake.

Mohawks protesting that developmen­t barricaded a road leading to the site and refused to comply with police and court orders demanding that they re-open the road.

In August of 1990, Quebec Premier Robert Bourassa in‐ voked the National Defence Act, calling on the Canadian military to replace Quebec provincial police in Oka. Mul‐ roney sent in the Canadian Forces.

Sean Carleton, an assis‐ tant professor of Indigenous history at the University of Manitoba, told CBC News the images that subsequent­ly hit television screens around the world gave Canada a lot of bad publicity.

"Canada was trying to present itself on the world stage as a peacekeepi­ng na‐ tion, and yet it's deploying its army to essentiall­y flex its military muscle domestical‐ ly," said Carleton.

"A lot of internatio­nal ob‐ servers were very critical. By the end of the Oka crisis, in September of 1990, Canada looked like a bully."

In an effort to reset Canada's internatio­nal repu‐ tation, Mulroney establishe­d the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples (RCAP) in 1991 with a mandate to study the relationsh­ip be‐ tween Canada and Indige‐ nous peoples.

The commission delivered its 4,000-page final report three years after Mulroney left office, in 1996. It called for a complete restructur­ing of the relationsh­ip between Indigenous peoples and Canada.

Ouellette described the findings of that report as "fantastic," adding that while no actions were taken - and the commission was only launched because Mulroney needed a positive counter‐ point to Oka - the report did address the issue of residen‐ tial schools and led to the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission.

Belcourt told CBC News that while many were disap‐ pointed that none of the rec‐ ommendatio­ns were acted upon initially, the work that was done is valuable to this day.

"The recommenda­tions from RCAP were all very solid recommenda­tions and any government could take those, and look at those rec‐ ommendatio­ns and say, 'OK, let's implement them and we'd be a heck of a lot fur‐ ther off,'" he said.

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