When the referee wasn't looking

With every action and inaction, Harper is changing Canada—and we’re not noticing

by Paul Wells on Friday, October 23, 2009 9:00am - 164 Comments

091021_top_wellsWhen the referee wasn't looking We’re all exhausted up here in Ottawa. We are so busy telling you whether there will be an election (Yes!) (No!) (SO EXCITING) that we sometimes don’t notice things. Sometimes the government doesn’t mind our not noticing, and it plays little tricks to encourage the not noticing. So on a Friday afternoon the government announced it was putting a question to the Supreme Court of Canada. Friday afternoons are an excellent time to say things if you don’t want them noticed. Yet it is such a rare thing for a government to put a question to the Supreme Court that some of us reported it this time, even though it had happened on a Friday afternoon. All the same, by Monday most of us had forgotten it had even happened, because we needed to spend more time wondering whether there will be an election (Yes!) (No!) (SO EXCITING).

The question the Harper government has put to the Supremes is whether the federal government has the power to establish a national securities regulator, a body for writing and enforcing the rules around transactions like stock trades. The question really is whether Canada will provide a single regulatory climate for investors, or a patchwork of different ones.

In the best courtroom manner, the Harper Conservatives are taking care to ask a question to which they already know the answer: of course Ottawa has the power to establish a national securities regulator. Lots of countries establish national securities regulators. Investors love them, because they only have to file paperwork once. Canada’s 1867 Constitution is pretty clear on the matter, allocating to Ottawa the right to regulate “trade and commerce.” But provincial premiers hate the idea of a national regulator, because each of them gets to run a provincial regulator with its own rules. When they aren’t jealously guarding their constitutional jurisdictions against federal intrusion, provincial premiers are always happy to intrude into federal jurisdictions. And premiers seem to like living in a country where investment across provincial borders is as complex and expensive as possible.

Or they used to. More and more provincial governments have begun to see things Ottawa’s way. And by “Ottawa’s,” I mean both the federal Conservatives and the federal Liberals, because the Chrétien and Martin governments used to make wistful noises about wanting to establish a national securities regime too. By now only Alberta, Manitoba and Quebec are resisting federal Finance Minister Jim Flaherty’s project for a national regulator. Alberta politicians are fond of firewalls, it seems. Manitoba seems simply to be slow making up its mind (its finance minister, Greg Selinger, just replaced Gary Doer as the province’s premier). Quebec is a fantasyland, of course. Once the Supremes rule that federal jurisdiction is federal jurisdiction, Quebec and Alberta won’t have a leg to stand on. Even then the Harper government won’t force them to close their little local securities regulators down. Investors will take care of that by declining to invest in any jurisdiction that tries to snub the national regime. The feds don’t have to challenge provincial “rights.” They merely have to assert their own. The logic of a larger market will do the rest.

So in some ways this whole business is a foregone conclusion. But there’s still a lot at stake. The Supremes will find themselves tempted to draw some sweeping conclusion about the nature of federal responsibility for the economy, and the limits of provincial responsibility. These are thorny questions. Previous prime ministers were reluctant to tackle them, which is why Paul Martin and Jean Chrétien and Brian Mulroney all declined to pick the fight with the recalcitrant provinces that Harper is now picking.

So one of the most interesting things about this whole business is that Harper persists. He’s happy if we don’t notice, which is why his government made its announcement on a Friday afternoon. The Prime Minister has always been comfortable doing his hardest playing in the corners where the referee isn’t looking.

The consummate failure of the opposition parties to sustain and deliver a coherent analysis of this government that rises above “He’s so mean” leaves Harper plenty of room to advance his agenda. With two projects, the securities regulator and the attempt to secure free trade with Europe, Harper is trying to strengthen the Canadian economic union. With a succession of other projects—his abandonment of state-run child care in favour of per-child cash benefits; his lack of interest in higher education; his eagerness to underwork his health minister and his intergovernmental affairs minister (go ahead, name either one)—he is weakening the social union. The Canada he is building, deliberately and with little scrutiny or real opposition, has a stronger national market and a weaker national vision. I’m sure he would defend that project eloquently if pressed. His opponents seem disinclined to press him.

One more thing. You can sure tell the difference between Harper when he wants something done and Harper when he doesn’t. Contrast the methodical advancement of the securities-regulator project with the Prime Minister’s monumental incuriosity on the treatment of Afghan detainees. A report on prisoner abuse bounced all over Ottawa but somehow never made it to the desk of any minister with power to do anything about the alleged abuse. A commission investigating the cases of abuse that did arise has been requesting documents from the Harper government, in vain, for over a year. With every action and every stubborn inaction, Stephen Harper continues to reshape this country. One day we’ll all look back and wonder how we missed it while it was happening.

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  • http://intensedebate.com/people/hollinm hollinm

    Harper has made no secret of his intent to have the feds look after their own constitutional jurisdictions and let the provinces manage those areas that are theres. However, with Liberal government they want to control the purse strings thereby enabling them to inter in those areas that are the domain of the provinces. We talk about education as an example. We have a terrible education system. Kids are graduating who can't read or write and are not prepared to live in the outside world. Education is provincial responsibility but we can't even get the provinces to agree on a standard ciriculum which would see kids leave high school at least knowing how to read, write or handle their own personal finances. The fact is only about 30% of the kids go to university. Yet we insist on teaching them subjects that they will not have any use for when they leave high school i.e. geometry, algebra and the list goes on. There is no incentive for the provinces to provide quality education or an efficient school system because they are not accountable for the end result. If kids are not educated properly the only answer is the feds didn't give us enough money.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/hollinm hollinm

    hollinm continued

    Harper can show leadership by bringing the provinces to the table to develop an education system that works across the country but then hold them accountable for the results. The way we are going will result in producing a work force that is uneducated and cannot cope with everyday life skills. We don't live in a nirvana where every kid wants and will get a university education.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/TwoYen TwoYen

    The problem with CSA's "passport" approach was not that it challenged federal power, but that we still had 12 different agencies representing Canada at international fora. The was always going to be unworkable.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/TwoYen TwoYen

    "…because the Chrétien and Martin governments used to make wistful noises about wanting to establish a national securities regime too."

    Not exactly, Paul. Bureaucrats under the Chreitien/Martin era made repeated loud noises internally about the need for a national regulator. But we were consistently rebuffed by staff in Paul Martin's office who were concerned about the political fallout in Quebec. Paul Martin undertood the arguments in favour of a national regulator but I do not think he believed that it was worth the political price.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/TwoYen TwoYen

    I think your article is excellent and I agree with much of it. However, I think you do not give sifficient weight to one of the most important reasons why the federal govenment has finally found the guts to go over the heads of provincial opponents now. The global financial crisis has made it more important than ever for Canada to have a credible voice in international financial fora. Twelve provincial regulators just don't cut it sitting at a table with their single US or Chinese counterpart.

  • kcm

    The rebalancing of power is happening naturally as the population and economic power shifts west. The fact that the west's political power hasn't matched its economic power is not theft at all, but merely a reflection of majority rule. It's been a long road for firewall Steve to national economy champion.

  • kcm

    Yeah torture of individuals who hav'n't yet been tried is just a tempest in a teapot. Whatever would we do without hackneyed metaphors? And of course those who do not wish to abet torture are just trouble makers and Harper haters…must be nice to live in your teeny tiny conservative universe.

  • kcm

    Personally i'd like my federal govt to be more than an ATM machine for the provinces.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/madeyoulook madeyoulook

      Personally, I would like my federal government to be LESS than an ATM for the provinces.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/VinceClortho VinceClortho

      Try rebalancing the powers and you might get that result.

  • kcm

    Nice analysis. As for the overload of pith, i think PW dumped most of that on us on his next blog. :)

    • Bill Simpson

      Not just terse, but acidly witty.

      Pith and vinegar….

  • kcm

    "We have a terrible education system .[ Kids are graduating who can't read or write] and are not prepared to live in the outside world"

    You can't graduate without grade 12 English, which is a pretty tough exam. So what was your point again? Life's complex, so are many of the problems and solutions.

  • kcm

    Perhaps it wasn't such a great idea to so completely gut our labour markets. In the past many of the kids who didn't fit in were assured of empolyment and some measure of self respect. It was always a pipe dream to think all of them would get a higher education. It's not so surprising at all the lots of kids don't graduate. We see the consequences of not thinking through all of our economic and trade decisions.

  • kcm

    Which would you say is a bigger threat to individual liberty: The nanny state and or bureaucracy or corporate power. Honest question?

    • TedTylerEzro

      Both are dangerous, but I would say that the bureaucracy of government is the more immediate threat. Corporate power can ruin my economic interests or my environment, but the bureaucracy has more power to impose fines, demand conformity to certain policies, or restrict my liberty through imprisonment. Corporations could use their wealth to ensure such a thing as well, but they generally require the cooperation of a corrupt government to make it happen.

      Now that isn't to say that the bureaucracy and corporations don't serve valuable and appreciated functions, but they shouldn't be trusted. I don't think that should be a left vs. right wing thing… just common sense. After all, believe half of what you see and none of what you hear is a common expression for a reason.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/Jack_Mitchell Jack Mitchell

        See, this just comes across as whining. Personally I could not care less for your liberty, TedTylerEzro, and when push comes to shove neither could most Canadians (depending on the issue). The appeal to "But what about my inherent rights?!?" is just as off-putting from the libertarians as it is from any number of plaintive, Liberal-voting special interests. It's not an argument, it's pure sentiment. It reminds me of high school.

        • TedTylerEzro

          Meh, I'm not asking you to care. I'm asking you to give me the power so it's my prerogative to care rather than yours. I likes my parliamentary democracy, my free judiciary, my personal property rights, and my inherent human rights. I recognize that I depend on the wider society for a great many things, but I also have great reason to fear the power of the wider society can bring to bear on my individual self. I will say it loud and often that all powers given to our elites should be carefully considered and periodically reconsidered. For example, are these powers I have given up good for either me or the wider society, or does it serve a specific interest or an outdated and discredited 19th century ideology?

          Besides, of course you care about my liberty. That's why you don't want me going to Guantanamo. I presume you don't want to go to Guantanamo either. I also assume you don't like all the powers that the Canadian and (to a greater extent) the U.S. governments took rashly after Sept 11th, 2001 and have yet to rescind. Probably taken too rashly for the citizenry to fully apprehend (pardon the pun) the implications, and certainly more than overdue for a reconsideration.

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/Jack_Mitchell Jack Mitchell

            Well, see, there you're starting to give me reasons! That's all I asked for! And, needless to say, one is not eager to rescind your liberty, but if you want it expanded you likewise need to say why! "I want it and I want it now" can be implied.

          • TedTylerEzro

            I gave reasons before. I just didn't give specific examples.

            To wit, I quote myself:

            "bureaucracy has more power to impose fines, demand conformity to certain policies, or restrict my liberty through imprisonment." as to why I consider it a greater threat than corporate power.

            In other words corporations can scam me or make it impossible to make a decent livelihood, or cause massive and societal upheaval… but only the state really has the power to lay hands on me personally and lock me in a little box for years on end. Some states claim the power to execute me. So I fear the state more.

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/Jack_Mitchell Jack Mitchell

            I doubt you have much to fear in that regard.

          • TedTylerEzro

            Well, I'm certainly not heading to a shack in the depths of the NWT with a stash of automatic weapons. But people do run afoul of the system, and the larger and more intrusive the system the more likely you are to run afoul of it.

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/Thwim Thwim

            Except the state is what keeps the corporates from taking these powers.. albeit not quite as directly as the state may exercise them.

          • TedTylerEzro

            I would never deny that. Nor would I deny that the state is perhaps neglecting its duty in exercising the necessary power to reform corporate law. I imagine you agree with that Thwim.

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/Thwim Thwim

            Yes, we are completely agreed with that. If it doesn't vote, it's not a person, and many seem to forget that the privilege of the corporate veil actually is supposed to come with responsibilities to society.

        • http://intensedebate.com/people/madeyoulook madeyoulook

          JM, above: Personally I could not care less for your liberty, TedTylerEzro…
          JM, below: There is actually no moral virtue in selfishness…

          I do believe I might have just "pulled a Wherry." Not like the master himself, mind you, but give me time.

          • kcm

            My my MYL. Some might consider that trolling!

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/s_c_f s_c_f

            It is a rather effective one too.

        • http://intensedebate.com/people/madeyoulook madeyoulook

          Personally I could not care less for your liberty, TedTylerEzro, and when push comes to shove neither could most Canadians…

          First they came for Ted, and we did nothing, for we were not Ted. Then, they came for Jack and we did nothing…

          • kcm

            Far as i can see you've taken his remarks out of context…it that was deliberate…it's trolling.

  • kcm

    Fuuny! Was the -1 for me or didn't you like PW's quote?

  • matt

    I think Wells' piece shows that people (notably the Prime Minister) can have a "national vision" for the country without believing that *every* aspect of our governance ought to be national in scope / federally-delivered. Contrast trade with healthcare for examples of things that Wells thinks Harper thinks ought to be national and not. I think Wells implies at different places in his piece that Harper's view is a legitimate point of view, and in other places that, while legitimate, it's sub-optimal. And I'd agree with Sean that a lot of people in the West see the phrase "national vision" as something not to be trusted. But I disagree that such skepticism extends so far as to consider the country a "federation of convenience."

    • TedTylerEzro

      Perhaps not a federation of convenience, but a federation surely.

      Quebec alone would insist on that, and I don't see why the rest of us shouldn't enjoy our regionalism as well.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/SeanStok SeanStok

      I agree, 'federation of convenience' was probably too strong a way to put it. How about describing Canadian's sentiment toward their federation as increasingly utilitarian, and decreasingly emotional/cultural at its root?

  • matt

    Two questions to which I think I know the answers:

    1. If the national media is to play the role of referee, aren't they doing so in the skates of Mick McGeough?

    2. Could one legitimately substitute "centralist vision" for "national vision" in the daycare and healthcare critiques in the above article?

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Jack_Mitchell Jack Mitchell

    My point is that they're ineradicably eager to pursue causes, and you can't pretend they can be reformed. You may be a paragon of non-discredited humble individual anti-self-aggrandizement, but your neighbour isn't, can't be, and won't be. We need to accept that fact and deal with it. Otherwise we're just dreaming a libertarian pipe-dream.

    • TedTylerEzro

      Eh, I see no reason to submit to your argument that I need one ideological elite that seeks to transform me into a cog in their overarching ideology to protect me from other ideological elites. I'll accept them as they come and still strive to push for a society that is tolerable for me. Just because something is unattainable, doesn't mean you can't move closer in that direction.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/tigerinexil1428 tigerinexile

    And with this column, Wells continues his reign as the country's no. 1 Harperologist. (Though William Johnson comes close.)

    I don't see what the hue and cry is over in this comments section.

    Harper's pursuing free trade with the EU and a national securities regulator, and a greater sense of Canada as a single economic space.

    Other than the socialists and protectionists, who's against that? Don't you Liberals claim to be for this stuff?

    • TedTylerEzro

      Socialists generally would like a single economic space. They just want absolute control over that space.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Thwim Thwim

      Depends what is meant by "Free Trade".
      It it like our Free Trade with the US, where they violate the agreements and we give them money? Or perhaps where we give them unfettered access to our government contracts but they keep theirs closed off from us: http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/fullcomm…

      Or is it free trade like trying to give away control of our fisheries? http://thechronicleherald.ca/Opinion/1148064.html

      I'm for free trade when it stands to benefit both parties.. not when the object is to make a deal just so you can say you've made a deal, as seems to be Harper's motif.

  • TedTylerEzro

    But if you insist, I can simply push to what my dream of an ideal society would be. Then since you probably oppose it vehemently we could have a huge cultural/civil war and everyone would be happy.

    Otherwise we can largely learn to get along with each other and consider and reconsider each policy according to its function and result, rather than an overarching ideology designed to remake society into some grand project.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Jack_Mitchell Jack Mitchell

      "An overarching ideology" seems like a pretty apt description of libertarianism to me. It's like Argentinian dulce de leche: you can apply it to anything, though the palate can only take it for so long.

  • claudia lemire

    Makes sense!!

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Dennis_F Dennis_F

    or obsessing over "ka-cheques" bearing logos.

  • Mulletaur

    That could have been resolved very easily by having the provinces nominate somebody to speak for them, just like the European Union does on matters concerning foreign relations. It's not a sufficient excuse for the feds to jump in.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/TwoYen TwoYen

      Canada has long sent reps from OSC and BCSC and other provincial regulators to international financial meetings on securities issues. However, other countries have complained for years that they want a single voice representing Canada.

      • Mulletaur

        That's nice. They can bite us. They will take what they get. In any case, what they were doing in the past is not what I'm proposing.

        • Orson Bean

          The posts here are misleading. Typically at international fora, we have had just the head of the CSA attend. I'm ok with a national regulator as long as we have strong regional offices to serve the markets esp in Vancouver, Calgary and Montreal. But good lord, people are grossly misinformed about the amount of harmonization that already exists. The amount of legislative harmonization which currently exists is very significant (go open up an office consolidation of your provincial securities act and count the number of National Instruments — which are uniform statutes adopted across the country — it's huge). People have been brainwashed by the Globe and Mail editorial board into thinking we've got some incoherent mess of a system, and grossly misleading and unfair to the CSA and all the others, who have significantly tranformed our system over the last 20 years and achieved an admirable amount of harmonization.

  • Susan

    Good comment dbk. The nat´l regulator is the one solution to supercede all the indiv. prov. ones but with so many micro junior public companies in this country its almost cost prohibitive to register an offering in more than one jurisdiction, let alone market it nationally. When banks were allowed in the 90´s to take over the regional and national brokerage firms, costs again rose dramatically, and smaller public offerings have largely been stifled. I prefer the potential simplicity of a nat´l regulator but feel that in time we´ll lament the loss of vitality (and higher risk/reward) of having regionally distinct markets.

  • Susan

    Every US state has their own active regulatory agency as well as the SEC federally. If the recent imbroglio in the US still has you jaw-droppingly approving of the SEC you do have the faith. I contend that in many cases complex over-regulation in hand with regulatory examiners who pine for favour and approval from the titans of industry served up the beginnings of the meltdown of trading instruments very well.

    • Orson Bean

      Once again, people are posting without knowing the facts. The fact of the matter is that at international fora, Canada is typically represented by the head of the CSA, the Canadian Securities Administrators (which are made up of the provincial and territorial bodies). The CSA actually does a ton of work on harmonization, and does frequently speak with a single voice. It's so frustrating how almost nobody, except for securities lawyers, seems to be aware of this.

  • knick

    Curiouser and curiouser. . .
    folks in Victoria, BC were somewhat gobsmacked when John Baird turned up today (Oct 24) with one-third of the funding for replacement of the Johnson Street Bridge, price tag $63 million, and held a news conference against a backdrop of those blue Action Plan posters, no big branded cheque this time. The project had been previously turned down for federal or provincial funding, and the city had planned to provide all of the $63 million. The funds are coming from the 'Building Canada Fund', established a couple of years ago and now apparently a component of the stimulus program.

    http://www.timescolonist.com/news/Federal+governm…
    http://johnsonstreetbridge.org/?page_id=168

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/PhilCP PhilCP

    When the car with the crank sticking out of the front didn't start it was likely caused by something that many car owners were capable of fixing on their own. Nowadays even the mechanic at the garage with the high tech diagnosing machine only has about a 50-50 chance of getting it fixed in one visit. Sure, many things are better, but there does seem to be a lot of two steps forward, one step back.

    Blogging might be difficult with DOS, although there might be a certain amount of 'narrowing' of the pool of contributors…..

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/SeanStok SeanStok

      Amen, brother. There are days I seriously consider building a cabin in the woods to live out the rest of my days.

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