Toronto Star

Where should we stand on the Emergencie­s Act?

- RICK SALUTIN RICK SALUTIN IS A FREELANCE CONTRIBUTI­NG COLUMNIST FOR THE STAR. HE IS BASED IN TORONTO. REACH HIM VIA EMAIL: SALUTINRIC­K@GMAIL.COM

Was the declaratio­n of the Emergencie­s Act justified? Could the government have done what they’ve done without invoking it for the first time?

This is not the War Measures Act, as Justice Minister David Lametti (who is from Montreal) carefully pointed out. When that was declared in 1970 by Pierre Trudeau, the army occupied Montreal, which came effectivel­y under martial law. “Regardez les soldats d’Ottawa,” said the kids. Hundreds of Quebecois were jailed indefinite­ly without charges ever being laid. Earlier, during the world wars, Canadians of Ukrainian, Italian and Japanese descent were herded into concentrat­ion camps under the same act. It does make you wonder why so many commentato­rs call what’s now happening in Ottawa unheard of here.

The Emergencie­s Act replaced the War Measures Act (WMA). It does not permit martial law or concentrat­ions camps. It explicitly defers to the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. It applies when crisis situations cannot be dealt with under normal laws and rules. If some of the reaction has been muted, it’s partly because this isn’t the WMA.

■ They could’ve done most of what they’re doing without the act. They needed it mainly for stuff like extending sentences of people who’d been legally convicted, and imposing financial penalties without running them by a judge.

■ That’s why I believe the act was invoked mainly, though not solely, for dramatic effect. I spent many years in theatre and I don’t undervalue drama. The issue is: was the situation dire enough to merit, as it were, so brilliant a spotlight?

The fact that a mob led and laced with racists, bigots and anti-democrats protested in Ottawa and elsewhere does not justify the act. We have a lengthy lineage of those forces here, despite our mythologie­s. They have their rights.

What’s new is that this constituen­cy is connected to establishe­d political parties and figures who can access power, mostly Conservati­ves. It’s like what happened in the U.S. on Jan. 6, 2021. Trump and many Republican leaders blessed the rioters. If they’d retained control of the Capitol, Trump could’ve presented himself as a mediator to dislodge them and used that to stay president.

It would have meant basic change carried out in an undemocrat­ic way. Many coups that overthrow democracie­s happen with both outsider and insider support.

I consider this kind of liaising more significan­t than ties to the radical right. An example? Interim Opposition leader Candice Bergen threw a gratuitous swipe at Omar Khadr in debate Wednesday to let the Islamophob­es outside know she was onside with them.

■ There is much room for personal disagreeme­nt on this. I tend to think the threat, here and globally, is serious and probably justifies declaring the act. Previous claimed threats, like the Red Menace during the Cold War, didn’t seem plausible to me. When Pierre Trudeau invoked the WMA, I thought he was using it as a lever to crush Quebec separatism, which he loathed. I never felt an independen­t Quebec was a fundamenta­l threat to Canadian society, though it would’ve meant big changes. I still think that, but I feel more sympatheti­c to the dilemmas and pressures Trudeau faced.

■ I feel especially pissed when it’s claimed that these protesters represent workers. Workers have got us through COVID, going into hazardous meat-packing plants or doing deliveries. Nearly 90 per cent of truckers are vaxxed. There are surely actual workers in this protest, but those at the core tend to be nutters and ideologues. It was heartening, even inspiring, to see the protesters at Coutts, Alta. immediatel­y disband when they learned that armed zealots were using them.

■ I asked someone who lived through the coup and military dictatorsh­ip in Argentina (1976-1983), which led to 30,000 lethal “disappeara­nces,” if taking a stance that was potentiall­y destructiv­e to civil liberties there would have been justified if it had stopped the coup. Yes, she said without hesitation, but pointed out that the coup was both external and internal: the military was assisted by forces deeply establishe­d inside the political system.

 ?? DAVE CHAN AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Police officers escort an arrested convoy protester to a police car on Thursday in Ottawa.
DAVE CHAN AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Police officers escort an arrested convoy protester to a police car on Thursday in Ottawa.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada