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: Meet the new boss

by Paul Wells on Thursday, April 15, 2010 7:50am - 81 Comments

A few notes before the Foreign Affairs committee meets today to hear from Gérard Latulippe, the new president of Rights and Democracy appointed by the Braun/Gauthier faction of the board and rubber-stamped by the hapless salaryman who sits in the office normally reserved for foreign ministers, Lawrence Cannon.

The first is that it would be well if opposition members on the committee do not turn these two useful hours into a festival of scorn aimed at Latulippe. I thought his appointment was cause for serious concern because he made haste to sell out the Canadian federation in 1994 for the sake of a few more years in cushy Quebec diplomatic postings; because he left the Bourassa government quickly and under unflattering circumstances; and because his work at NDI was only a partial preparation for work at what was founded to be, and should be, a very different organization. But anyone has a right to a career of ups and downs, and everything I’ve heard suggests he was a valued asset to NDI, an organization that has done a lot of good in the world. (Here he is, from just before the R&D appointment, discussing his experiences as NDI’s country director for Haiti during the earthquake there.)

So committee members, eyes on the prize: embarrassing Latulippe is not an ambitious or particularly useful goal to set. The problem at R&D is not, or not primarily, its new president; it is the shady new board majority led by Aurel Braun and Jacques Gauthier, who continue to win themselves no friends as they try, fitfully, to explain their handiwork. On that score, this morning we note an evolution in the Globe and Mail‘s editorial stance. A January editorial there concluded reasonable things: the government can appoint who it likes and the board can run an organization as it likes. That’s no longer tenable, because the government has appointed fools who are looking for somebody else to blame for their foolishness. So today the Globe throws up its hands and say, What a mess. “The government should undertake an immediate and thorough review of its operations and the role of its board and staff. If the organization cannot be righted, its existence will be in question.”

Well, not quite. “The government,” in the radiantly obtuse person of Lawrence Cannon, has already undertaken an immediate and thorough review of R&D’s operations and decided that the joint is tickety-boo, thank you very much, and that Aurel Braun may continue to pursue with impunity whichever demons haunt his dreams. “The government” will not fail to back its latest board appointments. And declaring R&D a mess that must be shut down merely conforms to the second-best preference of Braun and company. If they cannot run the sandbox their way, they don’t want a sandbox. Offering them no-fault insurance to execute such an option avoids the obligation to assign blame. Who made that place a mess?

To answer that question there is only one tool remaining. Fortunately it was designed by Braun and Gauthier and comes pre-endorsed by Cannon. That’s the forensic audit the Braun Clown Posse ordered in February to “guarantee full transparency in the proper spending of Canadian taxpayers’ dollars.” In case anybody misunderstood, the headline on the news release hammered the point home: “Rights and Democracy acts to ensure financial transparency.”

Of course Braun and Gauthier have no such goal. They want to continue casting aspersions on the management practices of a dead man, Rémy Beauregard, even though they had to admit as they launched this witch hunt that they had no “direct evidence of any individual impropriety.” And even though the organization’s staff had serious misgivings about Deloitte’s mandate — especially the way it was contrived to investigate financial dealings before Jacques Gauthier became interim president, but none since he did. That’s not very transparent.

But a funny thing happened on the way to the witch-dunking. Deloitte turns out to be a serious organization. One that, it may safely be assumed, would not enjoy being conscripted into somebody else’s show trial. The audit is taking far longer than expected: Gauthier and Co. expected Deloitte to report within three weeks, but Deloitte is not quite done its work six weeks later. Serious work is being done. Which explains why the only people now demanding the audit’s release are the staff, and fired former staff, who were supposed to be its target.

“Results will be made public as soon as possible after the report is accepted by the board of directors,” the February news release said. In the news release that went out under his name, Cannon expressed  “the Government of Canada’s support for the decision made by the Board of Directors to engage a private firm to conduct a forensic audit of the organization’s financial transactions.”

Very well then. This audit was Braun and Gauthier’s idea. They promised to release it. The Government has formally endorsed the audit. The Foreign Affairs Committee should require its complete release, as soon as Deloitte submits it, along with formal certification by Deloitte that the version released to the public is the entire audit. I cannot imagine such a motion would fail to receive the unanimous endorsement of MPs from every party.

Time to end this charade.

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  • Ross

    This whole affair is just another example of this government injecting it's one sided views into as many facets of canadians lives as possible,no matter how underhanded their methods may have to be,and they wonder why scandals keep cropping up.

  • George

    There was a very good discussion on French CBC TV on April 9, called: Le Canada sous influence – Le poids du lobby pro-Israël à Ottawa
    http://www.radio-canada.ca/emissions/une_heure_su…

    From it I found that the new Chairnam of R & D , Aurel Braun is a former Director of B'nai Brith Canada and the other newly appointed member of the Board David Matas is the legal counsel of B'nai Brith. So, it would appear the R & D has suddenly become a division of B'nai Brith. No woander it no nonger wants to give even a penny to any Palestinian organisation.

    I hope that French program will eventually be shown on the English CBC TV. It really opens our eyes on this issue.

    • Margaret

      Not if it's on CTV it won't. Peter Mackay is supposed to be getting married to one of CTV's executives.

      Strikes me as a conflict of interest, and a marriage of convenience – or a political alliance.

  • Ottawavalleyvoice

    In addition to George's remarks about Braun's and Matas' links to B'nai Brith, check out the backgrounds of Tepper, Gauthier and Navarro-Genie and their pro-zionist sympathies. Their positions on the Board were made not because of their Conservative affiliations. They are attempting to impose a pro-zionist approach and ideology at R&D and are not at all concerned with respecting official Canadian foreign policy. In this sense, they are being used by Harper to impose his personal views. They are undermining our official foreign policy and tarnishing further our international reputation. The opposition parties should be jumping all over this travesty of justicie and pernicious actions on the part of our Government.

    • Margaret

      I have no sympathy whatsoever left for B'Nai B'rith or Israel, or Zionism – nothing. I've always thought Israel was just wonderful, now I think we should let them figure life out on their own. Now that the US is not on the greatest terms with Israel (Obama Netanyahu), it looks as if we're their next chosen country, and I resent it a lot.

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/prielr prielr

    [youtube BHedlakZNNAhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHedlakZNNA youtube]

    I have uploaded the hearings regarding the Rights and Democracy issue on to youtube. There are eleven videos in the series, worth watching and very revealing regarding Aurel Brauns despicable behaviour.

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/prielr prielr

    [youtube BHedlakZNNAhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHedlakZNNA youtube]

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/prielr prielr

    Uploaded the hearings regarding the Rights and Democracy issue on to youtube. There are eleven videos in the series, worth watching and very revealing regarding Aurel Brauns despicable behaviour.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHedlakZNNA

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