The Telegram (St. John's)

Improving after the pandemic

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Maybe it comes from the school of thought that “every cloud has a silver lining.”

Maybe it’s along the lines of snatching victory from the jaws of defeat.

And maybe, it’s a slice of that valuable entreprene­urial worldview that sees change not just as a threat, but as an opportunit­y.

Many people in this country are looking at the current COVID-19 pandemic as an opportunit­y to make Canada a better, stronger place. And the time for that discussion, frankly, is now.

Last weekend, former prime minister Brian Mulroney spelled out some new directions this country could taking after the pandemic: action to deal with systemic racism generally, and injustices faced by Indigenous peoples in particular, are a key element in his plan. Mulroney also proposes a considerab­le increase in both the number of immigrants Canada accepts — a plan that would double the country’s population to 75 million — and methods to increase Canada’s productivi­ty.

Elements of that plan seem unusual, coming from a political leader once seen as sitting on the right-leaning side of the Canadian political spectrum — and you can pretty much be assured many of Mulroney’s solutions are not things the current Conservati­ve party might embrace.

But maybe, just maybe, it’s time for Canadians to look beyond the confined policy silos of our major federal political parties, and start looking for a unified set of possible solutions for what comes next.

What comes next certainly appears to be significan­tly different from what we’re used to — and addressing it is not as simple as picking from the current policy books of the existing political players. We need more than a Liberal playbook, or that of the Conservati­ves or the New Democrats.

We need a national direction that will take advantage of opportunit­ies and use Canadian skills and abilities in the best way possible. We have to plan and prepare for changing resource demands — like the decline of oil — and find ways forward.

Change is coming — because the world is changing, and some of the biggest changes are clearly coming to the United States, a customer, neighbour and partner we have depended on for generation­s. If we aren’t ready for that change, you can be assured that something will be imposed upon us by circumstan­ce, and that is not the way to make the best of plans.

As Mulroney wrote, “Our approach should be driven by the hard reality that, in a POST-COVID world, two fundamenta­l pillars that have influenced Canada’s success to date — a privileged relationsh­ip with the U.S. and our ‘middle power’ reliance on key multilater­al institutio­ns — are no longer assured. We need to navigate smartly and more nimbly to advance Canadian interests in what promises to be a more tumultuous, unpredicta­ble world.”

Let’s get started.

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