Posted on 06/25/2004 9:12:02 PM PDT by quidnunc
By time-honoured tradition, the first official ritual of a Canadian election campaign is the dissolution of Parliament by proclamation of the Governor-General. The second official ritual of a Canadian election campaign is the ceremonial disowning by the Reform/Alliance/Conservative leader of whichever member of his caucus has been foolish enough to bring up some unmentionable subject.
Most of the subjects those of us on the right enjoy talking about from health care to immigration - are unmentionable during an election campaign, so theres no shortage of candidates for the ceremonial distancing (for a backbencher) or enforced resignation (for a frontbench critic). Even so, this time round the two ceremonies all but overlapped. Her viceregal eminence had barely finished dropping the writ before Scott Reid was being stripped of his portfolio by Stephen Harper and cast into outer darkness.
Mr Reid had committed the gaffe of musing to The Moncton Times And Transcript on the merits of bilingualism or, rather, on the merits of Federally mandated and funded bilingualism, which isnt quite the same thing, though for the purposes of hustings huffery-puffery were obliged to pretend that it is.
Stephen Harpers careful effort to assure voters his Conservative party would not take Canada in radical new directions was shaken Thursday, pretended excitable Steve Lambert of the Canadian Press, when one of his influential MPs resigned his portfolio after suggesting an overhaul of the Official Languages Act.
-snip-
(Excerpt) Read more at steynonline.com ...
I would be in favor of scrapping enforced bilingualism and giveaways to Quebec. Its just not politic to discuss it during a Canadian election.
POLITICS IS SO DIVISIVE
By time-honoured tradition, the first official ritual of a Canadian election campaign is the dissolution of Parliament by proclamation of the Governor-General. The second official ritual of a Canadian election campaign is the ceremonial disowning by the Reform/Alliance/Conservative leader of whichever member of his caucus has been foolish enough to bring up some unmentionable subject.
Most of the subjects those of us on the right enjoy talking about from health care to immigration - are unmentionable during an election campaign, so theres no shortage of candidates for the ceremonial distancing (for a backbencher) or enforced resignation (for a frontbench critic). Even so, this time round the two ceremonies all but overlapped. Her viceregal eminence had barely finished dropping the writ before Scott Reid was being stripped of his portfolio by Stephen Harper and cast into outer darkness.
Mr Reid had committed the gaffe of musing to The Moncton Times And Transcript on the merits of bilingualism or, rather, on the merits of Federally mandated and funded bilingualism, which isnt quite the same thing, though for the purposes of hustings huffery-puffery were obliged to pretend that it is.
Stephen Harpers careful effort to assure voters his Conservative party would not take Canada in radical new directions was shaken Thursday, pretended excitable Steve Lambert of the Canadian Press, when one of his influential MPs resigned his portfolio after suggesting an overhaul of the Official Languages Act.
If anybody has to ask is there a difference of opinion as to the kind of Canada that we want and the kind of Canada Mr. Harper wants, I think that this is an indication of what thats all about, pretended Paul Martin, pretending to be highly indignant. I find it quite disappointing that Mr. Harper was unable to express himself on what I really do think is an essential foundation of the way in which we look at the country.
I dont care about official bilingualism one way or the other. In the great Niagara of waste and corruption cascading out of Ottawa, its a mere droplet. And, if a landlord has 15 male tenants and five female tenants and wants to declare his apartment house is therefore officially 100% hermaphrodite, wheres the harm? But, likewise, if Mr Reid wants to share a few thoughts on the subject, wheres the harm?
Its divisive, says Paul Martin. Like Jack Layton bringing up the Clarity Act. Thats also divisive, says the Prime Minister. And Heaven forbid that competitive electoral politics should get divisive.
Its not like that south of the border. Say what you like about Americas two-year election campaigns, but you cant complain that the big issues dont get an airing. On the biggest issue of all, of course, our election campaign has nothing to say: unlike the other great anglosphere democracies, we are irrelevant to the war on terror and that inevitably makes our hustings the dull provincial bus-&-truck tour to their glittering Broadway production. On the great question of the age, we have chosen to be, as David Warren put it, spectators in our own fate.
But dont you get the vague feeling that were spectators in our own fate on a whole bunch of non-war issues, too? If you read your morning paper this election season, there are two parallel universes. In the non-divisive political world, the permitted parameters of debate on most topics range from throwing more money at it (the Liberal position) to throwing lots more money at it (the NDP position) to admitting the very tentative possibility of a little bit of light tinkering (the Conservative position). In the real world, its frighteningly clear that none of these is remotely up to the scale of the problem.
Take health care, where political viability requires the Conservatives to try to avoid saying anything divisive. The other day, as I was reading about the Liberals exciting $9 billion plan, my eye fell on a small story in a side column at the foot of the page about two twin boys born at the Royal Alexandra Hospital in Edmonton. Thats in Alberta. Their mother, Debrah Cornthwaite, had begun the day by going to her local maternity ward at Langley Memorial Hospital. Thats in British Columbia.
They told her, yes, your contractions are coming every four minutes, but sorry, we dont have any beds. And, after theyd checked with BC Bedline, they brought her the further good news that there was not a hospital anywhere in the province in which she could deliver her babies. There followed seven hours of red tape. Then, late in the evening, she was driven to Abbotsford Airport and put on a chartered twin-prop to Edmonton, in the course of which flight the contractions increased to every two-and-a-half minutes.
Would you want to do that on your delivery day? They dont teach it in Lamaze class. Instead of being grateful to the greatest health care system on the planet, Mrs Cornthwaites husband Brandon has been deplorably divisive and compared it to that of a Third World country. He has a point. There are circumstances in which citizens of developed nations occasionally find themselves having to be airlifted to hospital if they live, say, deep in the Australian bush or the interior of Alaska. But the Cornthwaites are a stones throw from the provinces biggest city.
Sorry, no beds. Try the neighbouring jurisdiction.
With Canadian healthcare sliding toward its logical conclusion a ten-month waiting list for the maternity ward heres a question to ask your Liberal chums: Do you seriously think your $9 billion plan will make two cents worth of difference? Anymore than did your $21 billion plan to save heath care back in 2000? And, whether its $9 billion or $21 billion or a hundred billion trillion gazillion, wont most of it just get sucked up in the maw of bureaucracy? And the rest will go to miscellaneous expenses like chartering Cessnas for pregnant moms? (Ill bet the Cornthwaites are glad those twin-props arent run by a government transit commission. Otherwise, thered be a two-week waiting list for that, too.)
A Canadian health care system would have been less of a mess in the Middle Ages, when your basic cure for everything was to slap on the old leech. Though even then Ill bet the papers would have been full of stories about a Langley couple going to ye olde King Ethelred the Unready Memorial Hospital and being told they were out of leeches until the next delivery in October. But today the problem with health care is that its costs grow faster than anything else in society. And an unaccountable government-run bureaucracy-heavy unionized monopoly is the least equipped model to control those costs. Indeed, its barely under any requirement to keep meaningful ledgers. In other words, the gap between the demands on the system and its ability to satisfy them will only widen, and widen, with every passing year. Thats not a partisan political observation, just a fact of life - as long as we cling to a 1960s system that, like Trudeaupian bilingualism, is apparently inviolable. In Montreal, for example, our right to receive medical services in the language of our choice has dwindled down to the right not to receive medical services in the language of our choice.
I wouldnt mind if this banishing of the big issues was a temporary suspension for the duration of the election. But most of them will remain off-limits whoever forms the government. Certain aspects of the Trudeaupian state are like Frankenpierres monster theyve escaped the care of their nominal master and seem set to stagger about the landscape causing mayhem indefinitely. Indeed, the defining characteristic of Canadian public policy is the obstacles it erects to any kind of fresh thinking. The main reason for that is the Trudeaupian preference for identikit policies coast-to-coast, whether harmlessly fraudulent like bilingualism or more damagingly so like health care. And in a highly centralized body politic how do you get any new ideas into the bloodstream?
Think Globally, Act Locally is a favourite slogan of the left. Unfortunately, thanks to them, its all but impossible to act locally. I dont expect a Conservative government to solve health care, but I do expect them to liberate the provinces in the hope that one or two might experiment a little creatively. If we have to fly over the mountains when the contractions are coming, it ought to be because theyve got a great new system on the other side.
The Western Standard, June 14th 2004
Seems to me it is long past time Canada give Quebec a choice. Learn English, or form your own country.
Of course here in the US I think it is high time we have the government do all its official domestic business solely in English. Want to vote but you can't speak English? Too bad.
-snip-
Its time to stop giving Quebec special treatment. They can either be part of Canada under the same rules as everyone else or they opt out of Canada.
Bump for later reading.
Thank you for posting this piece.
[Glad there's at least one other grownup around!]
Classic.
Steyn is awesome......but it's waaay to early to wade through this....bookmarked for later, and when I can find my Canadian dictionary...
.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.