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
He also offers his thoughtful perspective of Stephen Harper’s last 10 years in his recent eBook, The Harper Decade.

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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  • Dot

    <i.I understood that Broadbent had actually been a member of the board.

    Quite some time ago. He had no first hand knowledge of the events – just repeating what he had heard or read.

    In themselves, Braun's "scheduling" difficulties have turned into a major comedy routine. Yeah, hilarious.It's like he's running like a barnyard chicken.

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

    "For what it’s worth, I’m happy Maclean’s remains a place for opposing views on important issues. "

    I'm completely confused about the whole R&D debacle, but I agree wholeheartedly agree with this statement.

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

    I totally disagreed with you yesterday and I totally agree with you today :)

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

      We've disgreed too Gaunilon, fundamentally in a couple cases; and, you drink hard alcohol to spruce up your Macleans comments and I drink wine. Given our differences, I still find you reasonable on occasions and have given you the odd thumbs up (really, I have) :):)

  • Canuckistanian

    When I read the Board's op-ed this morning I thought immediately of your quote "The guy they're heaping calumnies on is safely tucked away in his grave." Love that quote. Disgusted by those smearing a dead man.

    What was the point of this op-ed? I fail to see how dragging out their clearly fallacious PR is helpful. I suppose this issue isn't going away though. Muddying the waters may not be a bad strategy. I still think that stonewalling may have been better to kill this story in infancy. Meh.

  • Canuckistanian

    err, the Board's op-ed that is…I shall read Frum's later.

  • Canuckistanian

    Make that Thursday, April 1st. Heh.

  • Shakois

    Thanks Paul. Keep it up.

  • Tony

    Paranoiaaaaaa

    • Amy

      I am Roderick Russell's daughter. I have been threatened and intimidated. My entire family has been threatened and intimidated. My father is telling the truth! However, the awful and disgusting comment by "Tony" above may well be CSIS.

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

      Unfortunately, Tony the situation is not paranoia, the police reports and recorded death threats are the tip of the iceberg. If my Fathers situation was as baseless as your claim is then I am sure Harper would have no problem investigating.

      • Lee

        I hear you! I looked under my bed last night and, wouldn't you know it, there were a CSIS agent and an RCMP Corporal down there drinking the beer that Harper won from Obama. God deliver us from evil.

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

    It's interesting that they copied two years of staff emails – I see what you mean about the "mega search". Are the SB/D&T guys still at the R&D office these days?

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

      I imagine if they had to go through two years of emails (they probably didn't budget for that in their time estimate) they would still be there.

    • Mulletaur

      Any audit which copies two years of staff e-mails is a witch hunt by definition. It should be interesting to see what the bill to the taxpayer will be for these highly paid "forensic auditors" to be trawling though e-mails like a gang of perverts looking for frilly undies hanging on washing lines in peoples' backyards …

  • http://drdawgsblawg.blogspot.com Dr.Dawg

    What a coincidence: yet another mouldy-stale opinion piece planted by the Magnificent Seven just before their Board meeting, and then on the same day an equally mouldy piece by the Senator. To use the Seven's phrase today, isn't Linda Frum an "outsider with an agenda?"

    This week there will be a by-law change that concentrates more power in the hands of the President–including the right to let contracts without tender. But, the Seven aver, the imbroglio down at the Centre is all about accountability. Uh-huh.

    Something smells, and, as they say, it isn't roses.

  • Orson Bean

    Dot, your line of inquiry is far too sophisticated for this forum.

    This is all you need to know:

    1. David Frum once worked in George W. Bush's White House.
    2. George W. Bush is evil incarnate.
    3. Therefore, David Frum is also evil and speaks with forked tongue.
    4. Linda Frum is David Frum's sister.
    5. Therefore, Linda Frum is also evil and speaks with forked tongue.

    Got it?

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

    The real fantasy would be being able to ground these "adults" and put them in the corner to review their questionable deeds and squabbling. I'm finding myself rather scornful of both groups behaviour but increasingly so with the boards failure to uphold the ideal of accountability.
    It's a heinous disease spreading throughout the political system when attacking your accuser is more important than your mandate.
    Harsh irony of a Canadian Senator of any strips mentioning the free will use of tax-payer money.

    • kcm

      “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"

      What's this about? One thing we do know, Aurel Braun is an unmitigated disaster as principle spokesman for R&D. Somewhere, someone who thought it a good idea to appoint this guy to the board is having conniptions. I'm sure Mr Braun is a good family man,a good prof and a passionate advocate for Isreal, but really, it's almost painful to watch, the guy's a walking ticking PR timebomb.

  • Daddy-O

    You know what ? I think this controversy has now made Canada's average citizen aware of R&D's existence.

    It seems R & D is wasting a lot of everybody's time… and for what gain? I mean, what does Canada gets for spending 11 millions $$/year? Nothing it seems.

    We have a huge deficit in Ottawa. Why don't we take this opportunity to stop partisan politics and save 11 millions dollars?

    Does anyone knows how much of taxpayers contribution it represents? How many families need to pay taxes to amount to 11 million $$ ?

    • albert

      I'd settle for the cessation of empty advocacy advertising with taxpayer dollars by Harper; surely that would top the $11 million.

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

        Or maybe both could be ditched.

    • Canuckistanian

      approximately: 1 quarter, 1 nickel & 3 pennies per person (not per taxpayer, mind you).

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

      hey Daddy-O, a coupe quick questions for you: what have you done to become informed about the activities of R&D and its impacts? and when did you do it?

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

    David Frum was George W. Bush's speechwriter in the period in which Bush was telling lies left and right that have profoundly screwed up international politics and nearly bankrupted the United States. Why people would take David "Axis of Evil" Frum seriously ever again is way beyond me.

    • Orson Bean

      Ok, you've convinced me. Because David Frum is evil and wrong about everything, his sister is evil and wrong about everything too. Does it mean his dead mother was also evil and wrong about everything, or does his evilness and wrongness not have such retroactive vicarious tarring effect?

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

      How DARE you call Margaret Wente a journalist????!!!!!

    • touquer

      After all, North Korea, Iran and Syria are simply misunderstood; nothing remotely evil going on there. And boy, were they wrong on Iraq: what a mess it is today, what with the democratically elected government, the decline in mass gas attacks on civilians, and the disturbing spectacle of a happy Kurdish population. Things were better before.

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

    If it's anything like my emails, an instant-delete of any message that contains the search strings "Niger*", "Viagra", "make her *", "lotto OR lottery", "Canadian pharmac*", etc., the two years' worth of emails would settle down to a manageable supply pretty quickly.

    Especially since these R&D folk wouldn't DREAM of engaging in personal email on company servers and on company time. Right?

  • Holly Stick

    Oh yes, there is some vitriol, but not so bad compared to the appalling comments one see on other media websites, the majority of them comeing from the Canadian teabaggers. (I'm not talking about Red Rose Tea here folks)

  • http://www.pogge.ca skdadl

    That will tend to happen if two people both have their facts straight. Truth-tellers don't need to confer.

  • Mulletaur

    Aside from a full disclosure of the results of the audit and its terms of reference, we should also have full disclosure of how much this audit actually cost. I am sure that would also make for interesting reading.

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

    Is that to suggest that we each got our 33 cents worth?

    I suspect the more people learn about R&D, the more they will think like Daddy-O. Which is likely fine with Harper. But then he should have just had the guts to give them six months to wind down operations. What's happening now is pathetic.

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

    Heh, now that's a good point. My work email has nothing personal on it. I must say that my personal email has a lot of work stuff on it!

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

    I didn't post Mak's c.v.; I linked to his valedictorian speech on Youtube, which was one of his career highlights thusfar. If that's his inquisition, I'd hate to see his fan club.

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

    He had a mother?

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

    That last bit is what got a certain Alaskan governor in trouble when her Yahoo (I think) email got hacked, no?

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

      uhm the specific content of the /work/ email mighta had something to do with it myl.

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

        I recall the bigger deal was that government business was not held on government servers. A little googling refreshed my memory:

        http://arstechnica.com/security/news/2008/09/pali…

        The break-in comes amid controversy over the Alaska governor's use of the Yahoo e-mail account for state business. Internal documents obtained by reporters allegedly show Palin staffers discussing the possibility of using unofficial channels, such as personal e-mail accounts, as a means of evading subpoenas and requests under the state's open records law targeting her official account.

        Though criticism of Palin's use of the Yahoo account had largely focused on worries about transparency, Donald Mitchell, the attorney for an Alaska citizen-watchdog who had been seeking disclosure of the governor's e-mail records, also broached security concerns. "There's a reason the governor should be using her own official e-mail channels, because of security and encryption," Mitchell told The Washington Post, "She's running state business out of Yahoo?"

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

          ok. well you def seem to be correct that there was considerable concerns regarding transparency (although I suspect isn't a governor when not on the board here), but i memory serves this morning there was also concern that some of the emails were connected to troopergate.

  • Orson Bean

    . . . not to mention the Directed Energy Weapons that CSIS is using to control my thoughts, via the fillings in my teeth. I knew that dentist was up to something . . .

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

    “Results will be made public as soon as possible after the report is accepted by the board of directors,” Gauthier said… 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?

    and any changes requested to the original draft? saying you will release a report once it is accepted is specific language about approving the report and its contents as opposed to receiving the report which suggests great independence.

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