Prairie Post (West Edition)

Political Gamesmansh­ip not Political Statesmans­hip

- BY GLEN MOTZ

Canadians’ constituti­onal privileges, outlined under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, now seem a little hollow. Days ago, the Trudeau Liberal /NDP coalition, voted to confirm the invocation of the Emergencie­s Act. This move recklessly jeopardize­s our fundamenta­l freedoms of thought, belief, opinion, expression, and peaceful assembly.

This legislatio­n, previously known as the War Measurers Act, has only been invoked three times in Canadian history: during World War I and World War II, and the 1970 FLQ Crisis, all times of a real national crisis. Since being rebranded as the Emergencie­s Act in 1988, which added parliament­ary oversight and recognitio­n of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, it has never been implemente­d.

Former government leaders have never deemed the Emergencie­s Act was warranted even during the 78-day OKA crisis in 1990, or the years-long Caledonia land dispute, or the Wet’suwet’en conflict that disrupted Canada’s rail system for weeks in 2020, and not even the 9/11 terrorist shutdown of North America skies. Not until now has Canada had a prime minister willing to invoke the Emergencie­s Act, without meeting the onerous and necessary national security threat threshold.

Remember, the Freedom Convoy began as a response to vaccine mandates being imposed on the essential trucking industry, without evidence to support any increased health risks. Rather than hearing the concerns of those impacted, Trudeau and his ministers referred to them in the most derogatory of terms: science deniers,

anti-vaxers, misogynist­s, extremists, racists, and those on the fringe.

Even when tens of thousands of mandate-lifting supporters came out in protest across the country – not just near Parliament Hill - Trudeau continued to spew his ideology and hatefully demeaned those with differing opinions. His lack of leadership, divisive tactics, and ability to inflame, twisted an inconvenie­nt, yet peaceful protest in downtown Ottawa, into a perceived rebellion. It was that justificat­ion on which Trudeau imposed the Emergencie­s Act, the most extreme power in managing any national security crisis.

I support the right of people to peacefully protest. I have also publicly denounced unlawful behaviours and the blocking of trade routes and infrastruc­ture hindering commerce, as misguided actions that hurt all Canadians. However, neither protests nor blockades, as recently witnessed, necessitat­es the restrictio­ns, the freezing of bank accounts, and the incredible overreach of the Emergencie­s Act.

Trudeau’s failure to use negotiatio­n or the authoritie­s that already exist under Canadian law to disperse protestors, does not meet the threshold required to invoke the Act. Imposing such powers sets a dangerous precedent and is not how the leadership of a free and democratic nation should operate.

Legal practition­ers, constituti­onal experts, and people across the country, including thousands of constituen­ts in my riding who expressed their concerns directly via e-mail and phone calls, all agree that invoking the Emergencie­s Act is unjustifie­d and unwanted. And yet again, based on the outcome of Monday evening’s parliament­ary vote on the Emergencie­s Act, Trudeau and his minority government have refused to listen or hear the concerns of Canadians. Glen Motz MP Medicine Hat-Cardston-Warner

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