National Post

Payette was dumped by gaggle of grumpy stenograph­ers.

IT IS AN ABYSMAL FARCE THAT MAKES A MOCKERY OF CANADA’S CONSTITUTI­ONAL CONFUSION AND OBSOLESCEN­CE

- Conrad Black,

The fiasco of departed governor general Julie Payette highlights what has gradually become the terminal absurdity of that office. It is a colonial title and the colonial governors general not only represente­d the French and British monarchs symbolical­ly but asserted almost absolute authority under the French and ultimate authority under the British until Lord Elgin was sent by the young Queen Victoria to establish responsibl­e government and autonomy in domestic matters for the then so-called united Province of Canada in 1848.

This was the triumph of robert Baldwin and Louis-hippolyte Lafontaine and Canada’s purposeful participat­ion in the revolution­ary movements that swept much of Europe that year, evicting the House of Orleans in France and bringing in Napoleon’s nephew, and ejecting the 39-year chief minister of the Habsburg Empire in Vienna, Metternich. Many of the early Canadian governors were very capable, especially Samuel de Champlain, the founder of New France, and Louis de Frontenac its principal defender against the hostile natives and Americans, and Sir Guy Carleton (Lord dorchester), chief author of the Québec Act and de facto founder of Ontario; they were among the greatest statesmen in Canada’s history.

The governor general continued to be an important official, and the British sent a sequence of distinguis­hed men: dufferin, Lansdowne, Stanley, and Aberdeen, were all senior British cabinet officials and the first two were Viceroys of India. The Marquess of Lorne was Queen Victoria’s son-in-law, the duke of Connaught was King George V’s brother and two of the last British nominees to the post were among the most distinguis­hed: the novelist John Buchan, Lord Tweedsmuir, and the allied commander in the Second World War in North Africa and Italy, who departed Ottawa to become Minister of defence in Mr. Churchill’s second government, Field Marshal, Viscount Alexander.

The initial Canadian appointees generally maintained this standard: Vincent Massey was a well-regarded minister to Washington and high commission­er in London and trustee of the National and Tate Galleries; Georges Vanier was a distinguis­hed and gallant general and a highly respected ambassador to France. roland Michener was a much-admired speaker of the House of Commons, Jules Leger was a very capable senior diplomat. Since then the only occupant of the appropriat­e stature to be the de facto chief of state of the G-7 country Canada has become was the gracious and elegant former speaker of the House and cabinet minister Jeanne Sauve.

Apart from that, the highest protocol position in the country has been shunted between voting groups. The admirable but not particular­ly exceptiona­l former premier of Manitoba Ed Schreyer was the first whose ancestry was neither British nor French. ray Hnatyshyn was the first ukrainian, roméo Leblanc the first Acadian,

Adrienne Clarkson the first Chinese-canadian, Michaëlle Jean the first Haitian-canadian, but none of them had especially remarkable careers. david Johnston was an earnest bureaucrat­ic careerist specializi­ng in university administra­tion, a good background for a senior public official.

I thought Julie Payette would be excellent, as contempora­ry and an ex-astronaut, and from my slight acquaintan­ce with her, a charming woman. Obviously it has not worked out, but the manner of her departure further minimizes the credibilit­y and relevance of the viceregal office. She was apparently pushed out because a number of members of the governor general’s staff, with full anonymity, assured a management consulting group engaged by the Privy Council Office to interview them, that there was a “toxic” and oppressive atmosphere among those working closely with the governor general.

The chief of state of this country, other than when the monarch is physically present in Canada, an event which has not occurred for many years, has been pitched out of office because of anonymous complaints against rude and authoritar­ian management. No allegation­s have been made of physical abuse or underpayme­nt of salaries or wages. It would be difficult to imagine anything more conducive to reducing the ostensibly highest office in the land to a state of utter fatuity. roughly analogous figures in some of the world’s other 198 countries, (including Taiwan, Palestine, and the Holy See), have been dispensed with in coups d’état where there was at least a threat of force; but I am confident that no other chief or acting chief of state has been given the high-jump because of the denunciati­ons of their manners by anonymous underlings. None of them was conscripte­d to do this work; why didn’t they quit if they didn’t like their jobs? Mme. Payette bloodlessl­y replicates the fate of Madame du Barry, mistress of Louis XV, who was sent to the guillotine on the evidence of her Bengali servant Zamor in 1793. He happily followed the tumbrel and cheered the execution.

It is an abysmal farce and it makes a mockery of the constituti­onal confusion and obsolescen­ce that afflicts the Canadian state. The only ceremoniou­s chiefs of state that function well are veritable sovereigns like Queen Elizabeth, the Emperor of Japan, and the monarchs of a number of northern and western European countries. The kings of Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and Thailand are the most powerful political figures in their countries. Ceremoniou­s presidents as in Germany and Italy tend to be veteran politician­s standing in, in those countries for the deposed Hohenzolle­rn and Savoy dynasties. I don’t believe that the hereditary principle will durably work for a non-residentia­l monarchy. Even if the present queen’s successors are as devoted and estimable as she is, the present system is ultimately impractica­l.

However, it is valuable and should not be jettisoned, because the senior members of the Commonweal­th, the united Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore are capable of forming an important and reasonably cohesive group of allied countries which between them would have in normal economic times a GDP of $6.5 trillion, the fourth bloc in the world after the united States, the European union, and China. The senior secular institutio­n in the world, the monarchy of Britain and the Commonweal­th, should be adapted to its headship. Such an entity would be timely as both the European union and the united States are in convulsion­s, the Eu because of institutio­nal strain ultimately resulting from the absence of democratic accountabi­lity for the European union government, and the united States in a crisis of national self-confidence following its overwhelmi­ng and bloodless strategic victory in the Cold War, when it’s Soviet rival peacefully disintegra­ted.

Let us devise a new office combining the prerogativ­es of a republican president with executive authority as in the united States and France, with the governor general, and the monarch should remain as co-chief of state of Canada with that official. There should be a premier, as in France answering directly to parliament and managing day-to-day government­al affairs as the premier of France does. Canada could revert to calling itself a dominion, a term coined and uniquely used in government­al terms by Canada (by the distinguis­hed father of Confederat­ion from New Brunswick Samuel L. Tilley), and it could be designated as combining seamlessly the best properties of a republic and a monarchy.

Canada is a unique country, the only transconti­nental bicultural parliament­ary Confederat­ion in the history of the world, and it should design for itself unique institutio­ns. And we should never again have the ostensible head of the country dumped by a gaggle of grumpy stenograph­ers. Personally I wish Mme. Payette well.

Note: In response to dr. Harry rakowski here last week, I have never represente­d donald Trump as “one of America’s greatest presidents,” but as a very successful president in policy terms, and the u.s. government has acknowledg­ed that my co-defendants and I should never have been charged; the doctor’s pious little homily about hubris was piffle.

THE HIGHEST PROTOCOL JOB IN CANADA HAS BEEN SHUNTED BETWEEN VOTING GROUPS.

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 ?? ADRIAN Wyld / POOL / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? “I thought Julie Payette would be excellent, as contempora­ry and an ex-astronaut, and from my slight acquaintan­ce with her, a charming woman,” writes columnist Conrad Black.
ADRIAN Wyld / POOL / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES “I thought Julie Payette would be excellent, as contempora­ry and an ex-astronaut, and from my slight acquaintan­ce with her, a charming woman,” writes columnist Conrad Black.
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