Toronto Star

A candidate’s baffling request

- Chantal Hébert

MONTREAL— Growing up in the late 1960s in Toronto, one commonly ran into otherwise well-meaning people who claimed that francophon­e parents who sought to have their children schooled in French were determined to keep their families out of the Canadian mainstream.

École secondaire Étienne-Brûlé — Toronto’s first French-language public high school — opened in September 1970, about a month before the kidnapping­s by the Front de libération du Québec (FLQ) of a provincial cabinet minister, who later died in captivity, and a British diplomat.

At the time, the school was the target of enough anonymous threats to warrant extra police protection. Indeed, days before it opened, a neighbour told me bluntly that the wooden barracks that were the temporary home of my new high school would be burned down before year’s end.

Had a government at the time of the War Measures Act set up a snitch line to report on so-called barbarian cultural practices or their 1970 equivalent, the French-speaking communitie­s that lived outside Quebec would have been considered by many as the ground zero for the fostering of anti-Canadian values.

Those were the days when an English-rights manifesto famously titled Bilingual Today, French Tomorrow became a bestseller in some circles. The then-Progressiv­e Conservati­ve party was home to a solid contingent of followers who thought a Quebec-led federal government was out to use official bilinguali­sm to wipe the English language and the country’s British heritage and values off the Canadian map.

The mastermind­s behind the residentia­l school system that destroyed the social fabric of so many of Canada’s indigenous communitie­s were even more imbued with notions of superiorit­y as to their values. Given the long and mostly dishonoura­ble history of the quest for a “unified” Canadian identity, it is hard to fathom what federal Conservati­ve Party leadership candidate Kellie Leitch is thinking when she uses such a pursuit to justify screening would-be immigrants for socalled anti-Canadian values.

A charitable explanatio­n would be that she skipped her history classes on the way to her medical degree. But what about more recent history, including that of her own party?

Among the values Leitch believes Canada should require support for from future immigrants, gender equality has pride of place. Fair enough. But many religions do not treat men and women equally. The Catholic Church for one does not. It denies women access to the priesthood. It frowns on contracept­ion, has long been at the forefront of the fight against abortion rights and opposes same-sex marriage.

On that basis, would Leitch subject the values of prospectiv­e Catholic immigrants to special scrutiny?

Moving on to gay rights and discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n, in the ’90s, the Reform Party fought tooth and nail against added protection from hate crimes for Canada’s gay community. For the record, more than a few Liberal backbenche­rs in Jean Chrétien’s caucus also opposed the change. Most said they were doing so on religious grounds.

Until last spring, it was still Conservati­ve party policy to insist that marriage should be reserved for heterosexu­al couples. Some of Leitch’s Conservati­ve colleagues are currently musing about running for the leadership to campaign for the restoratio­n of the party’s anti-samesex marriage stance. This rearguard battle comes more than a decade after the courts found equal access to marriage for same-sex couples to be a fundamenta­l right.

To this day, many of the supporters Leitch might hope to attract with her proposal to vet immigrants for purported anti-Canadian values would be hard-pressed to agree on what those could be.

A word in closing: it is excessivel­y rare, if not unpreceden­ted, for an interim party leader to censure the proposals of a leadership candidate. Interim leaders for the most part stay above the fray. Over the weekend, Conservati­ve interim leader Rona Ambrose made an exception for Leitch’s values musings. Most of Leitch’s leadership rivals have also come down against her proposal. They are right in their assessment that a leadership conversati­on along those lines would be divisive for the party in the short term and counterpro­ductive for the Conservati­ves in the longer one.

In a country as diverse as this one, there is a limited market for the notion that immigratio­n poses a bigger threat to the ever-evolving inclusive values of Canadians than some of the negative forces at play within some of its main parties. The Star’s View: Leitch points the wrong way, A20

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? PC leadership hopeful Kellie Leitch wants to screen future immigrants.
ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS PC leadership hopeful Kellie Leitch wants to screen future immigrants.
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