Inkless Wells

Inkless Wells

Paul Wells on all the latest out of Ottawa—along with the occasional post about jazz. Follow Paul on Twitter: @InklessPW

Rights and Democracy: Let 100 schools of thought contend

by Paul Wells on Monday, March 22, 2010 4:16pm - 100 Comments

The current print edition of Maclean’s contains a guest column from Sen. Linda Frum, a friend of this magazine who pauses to say some nice things about me while attempting a general rebuttal of my coverage of the Rights and Democracy controversy.

Frankly I hope readers commenting under Sen. Frum’s column will start to tone down the vitriol a bit. For what it’s worth, I’m happy Maclean’s remains a place for opposing views on important issues. I wish only that the Senator had shown up with a fresher arsenal of arguments. I see no point in wasting much time on her column because every single point she makes comes pre-rebutted in my earlier writing on this issue, except perhaps for her assertion that the R&D staff were “aided” in their conflict with the board “by the disappearance of managerial laptops and computer records.” The laptops disappeared in a burglary. What, precisely, is the Senator alleging?

Anyway. Elsewhere in today’s news, the Braun Seven majority on the board of Rights and Democracy has published another in their series of occasional op-eds wondering why the world is so mean to them. “We call upon Parliament to hold public hearings so that facts can replace fantasies, and we can move ahead,” they write.

Here’s a fact: after first confirming he would appear tomorrow before the foreign-affairs committee of Parliament, Braun has now sent word that he’s too busy to show up.

Here’s another fact: that’s how the guy rolls. Braun’s op-ed today repeats this casual calumny against a dead man, Rémy Beauregard: “Both before and after its compulsory submission of the review to government, the board’s evaluation committee (the same three members whose resignation is being demanded) repeatedly offered to meet with the former president to discuss the evaluation. Regrettably, he rejected that option, rejected the review of his leadership, and launched an intensive campaign to overturn it.” Here’s how I dealt with that the last time Braun and his crew trotted out that stale talking point a month ago:

Rémy Beauregard actually addressed that point in a long letter to the board of Rights and Democracy on Oct. 26, 2009. “With respect to the efforts made to accommodate the President for a meeting of the Committee,” he wrote, “it is important to clarify that of the 55 days proposed by the Secretary of the Board for such a meeting, the President indicated he was available for 45 of those days.”

Then why was there no meeting? Because, as I’ve learned when trying to seek comment from them, Aurel Braun and his pals can be difficult to pin down. The Executive Committee of the R&D board is supposed to meet four times a year. How’d that go in 2009? “In June 2009, the dates for these meetings were not set because some members were not sure of the days they would have to teach. The Secretary of the Board was mandated to hold an e-mail consultation to try to set a date that would be suitable for as many people as possible. Starting in early August, she proceeded with this consultation and offered fifteen possible dates for the meeting. None of the proposed dates was convenient.”

How handy now that Beauregard is dead and that my source for the above information, if an employee at Rights and Democracy, would be fired if discovered. So the Braun faction of the board can keep repeating their misinformation. The guy they’re heaping calumnies on is safely tucked away in his grave. I remain a minor inconvenience, but all they have to do is outlast me.

This same tactic — keep repeating risible claims in the hope that you will finally outlast scrutiny — informs another claim from today’s op-ed:

The plain facts show undeniably that the so-called “crisis” at Rights and Democracy was self-created by staff within the organization. Soon after the untimely death in January of Rights and Democracy’s president Rémy Beauregard, staff erupted into visible revolt against the board.

Got it? The crisis was “self-created by staff… soon after the untimely death in January” of Beauregard. Once again, this claim comes entirely pre-rebutted. The first print column I wrote about Rights and Democracy, way back in January, quotes a letter from five then-members of the R&D board to Lawrence Cannon last October saying the board — not the staff, or relations between the board and the staff, but the board itself — was “dysfunctional” and in a “crisis.” That was October. Beauregard himself used almost the same language in his own letter to Cannon in November, warning of “deep divisions.” Fortunately for Braun and Co., Lawrence Cannon apparently doesn’t read his mail.

And so on. Since this is the level Braun, his allies and their supporters in the Senate argue on, no wonder Braun is so hard to find when there is any danger of anybody arguing back. But I’ve got an easy one for him and Gauthier. They don’t even have to write anything down for this, nor sit in front of a microphone.

A month ago they hired Deloitte to do an audit of the company’s books over a carefully-selected date span. “Results will be made public as soon as possible after the report is accepted by the board of directors,” Gauthier said in the press release sent out by a communications firm he hired without tender outside the target period of the Deloitte audit.

Excellent. Good. Fine. Great. The Deloitte audit was going to take three weeks. That was four weeks ago. When will Braun and Gauthier table the audit — along with the terms of reference and the details of the consulting contracts Gauthier has entered into, on Rights and Democracy’s behalf, since February?

Since nobody has anything to hide.

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  • thomaus

    Why does the burglary in the Rights and Democracy office on the night of January 23 get lost in the shuffle? The chance that it was instigated by a non-player in this drama is outside the bounds of coincidence. What is the state of the investigation? Who handled the investigation? The Ottawa police? RCMP? CSIS? Is it already a cold case?

    If this event gets sorted out, we'll probably see who the 'bad guys' really are. But when I try Google news searches, there appears to be no current coverage, beyond what Paul Wells has mentioned. Does the press corps know who-done-it but they are covering it up? Or has the government squashed the investigation? Thinking back to coverage of a burglary during the Nixon administration, you'd think that some journalist would take this story and run with it.

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

    Thank you, Mr. Wells, for your continued attention to this story.

    Right now, the mess at R&D is tantamount to a mockery of the established principles for the governance of Crown corporations. The Board is probably in breach of the Financial Administration Act. The accountable Minister is in hiding. Employees are being pushed around, possibly in contravention of the government's own whistleblower protection act. The Board is breaking its own by-laws then changing them after the fact to dispense contracts without competition.

    The whole thing is a mess, few are paying attention, and the precedents being set by the Board and the government will influence how hundreds of millions of dollars given to agencies and Crown corporations every year will be managed from now on.

    So don't give up, please. Keep the spotlight on. It probably won't make a difference in the fate of R&D. But it could force the government to outline its stand, backed up by legal opinion, on ministerial accountability and governance for the future. That alone would be of great public service.

  • Elena

    Mr. Wells. I just wanted to say "Thank you."

  • unskewMacleans

    Upon recommendation by the Jewish Canadian Congress, the Harper government bestowed upon Sen. Linda Frum a salary of C$130,400 per year of Canadian taxpayer money for the rest of her life and told her to use the money to push whatever agenda she may prefer. No questions asked.

    First thing she does is to begrudge a measly $10,000 grant to a Palestinian human rights group who've been denouncing Israeli aggression for 30 years… and another one of $144,000 to the UN' High Commissioner for Human Rights. Does she feel that her yearly grab of taxpayers money is better spent?

    Not surprisingly, she's following the footsteps of her American/Canadian neocon brother David. He was a mouthpiece for the "axis of evil" administration of GWBush/Cheney/Rumsfeld and still carries on that role for the rightwing Israeli Likud party…

    Paul Wells tells us Sen. Frum is a friend of Maclean's magazine. Heaven forbid, does that mean we're to be fed even more anti-Islamism than what we already get ad nauseam from Barbara Amiel, Mark Steyn, et. al… from someone who's salary is paid for by Canadian taxpayers?

    • unskewMacleans

      …which reminds us of Mark Steyn's constant harping about "Eurabia". Before its creation, what is now Israel was a part of Palestine and when immigration pressure of European and American zionist jews started in earnest, arabs there were concerned about the threat of their country becoming "Palestein"…

  • Ottawavalleyvoice

    My god, Braun and company are still bulldozing and bullying their way forward. They must have the green light from Harper and company otherwise R&D would be back in businss doing the good work it was originally mandated to do (like exposing human rights abuses in East Jeruslam and elsewhere in the West Bank and Gaza). Frum is just another obstructionist they've brought into their malicious game. When will this farce end?

  • donnie mcleod

    You can focus on details and miss the big fact that Conservatives promise a lot but you can trust that they will your chances of dieing increase when they are incontrol. They don’t care, they have no remorse. There is term for that.

  • Donnie McLeod

    Harper is like the Smoking Industry. They both lead to death, they make money from causing death. They don't have any remorse about the death they cause. I wonder if the man is a psychopath, some business are and 1% of the population are. They both will nickel, dime and nit pick all dialog about the death they cause with well paid for words, costed at consultants and lawyers fees of $300 to $1,000 per hour. We can all know generally they cause death, but when we try to argue with them with specifics we loose. I think there has to be a better way than to argue with specifics.

  • Barry

    Most of the comments come down hard on the Board of Directors and support Mr. Wells. Each to their own, but my thoughts are that at the end of it all, these members of the Board will be vindicated. Those who are being criticized have more than enough integrity to ride out the storm and come out with their heads held high. They should be admired for their stand and yet as so often happens, the good guys who stand for the truth are being made out to be the bad guys. The sad part is that their hard earned reputations are being dragged through the mud with none of the allegations against them having being proved.

  • http://www.spartanmoving.com/ San jose movers

    What, precisely, gives Linda Frum the authority to comment on this issue at all?

    I'll read the column, but I doubt that'll help clear things up.

    Awesome comment and valuable info. Thanks for sharing.

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