Beyond The Commons

Beyond The Commons

Aaron Wherry covers all the goings-on in and around Parliament Hill. Follow Aaron on Twitter: @aaronwherry

The Commons: Your deferential silence is appreciated

by Aaron Wherry on Tuesday, May 4, 2010 6:54pm - 263 Comments

The Scene. Bob Rae watched the Speaker for his cue and then, when called upon, checked his tie and stood to face the government side.

“Mr. Speaker, I am going to have to try to find the words to ask this question,” he began. “Yesterday, Senator Ruth gave perhaps the pithiest, sharpest description one can imagine of Conservative political policy that we have all heard in a long time.”

This was perhaps not quite a compliment.

“Her advice to groups that are criticizing the government or that have an issue with the government or might want to raise the issue was, I am not going to quote entirely, quite simply,” he continued, turning to the Speaker with a somewhat apologetic look on his face, “Shut the ‘F’ up.”

You can for yourself imagine what the “F” here represents. We at this demure publication do not make a habit of printing the word, so I can only tell you that it begins with an F and that after that come three letters I can only represent with dashes.

“This is what has come to the current government,” Mr. Rae lamented. “This is a culture of intimidation that has now been established by the Conservative Party: If someone has a disagreement with the government, just shut the F up.”

Here then came the polite and proper and restrained Transport Minister John Baird to respond. “Mr. Speaker,” he reported, “obviously that type of language is completely unacceptable.”

Obviously.

The language in this case is Nancy Ruth’s, the Conservative senator who, yesterday, advised those unhappy with the government’s approach to aiding maternal health worldwide that they best “shut the f— up,” lest they inspire further backlash. Here was fear masquerading as friendly advice. Cynicism passed off as political cunning.

Here, most conveniently, were four words to define this time in Ottawa. Never mind translating it into Latin, it seems fitting to leave it in its crudest form. From sea to shining sea, shut the f— up.

This is, as often lamented, the unofficial mantra under which both cabinet ministers and aspiring government backbenchers are believed to be expected to operate. In professional circumstances, “shut the f— up” is known as “communications.” In paper form, “shut the f— up” is known as “redaction.” And as much as the leading pundits moan about all of this, “shut the f— up” is the one piece of advice they shout at the leader of the opposition whenever he emits a word or two that might be considered passably interesting.

So now we learn that shutting the f— up is the best way to cajole this government. Or at least that shutting the f— up is preferable to not shutting the f— up. The optimal Ottawa would thus seem to be one in which no one says anything in more than a deferential whisper, and even then only rarely and when asked.

This is, granted, not quite a revelation.

It is this Prime Minister, mind you, who is on record as the only in the nation’s history to have launched legal proceedings against Her Majesty’s loyal opposition—a libel suit he loudly threatened and officially pursued, then quietly dropped some months later. Less actionable offenses are met simply with the sort of invective that intends to compel silence—or maybe obliterate. Those who have too insistently pressed the issue of this country’s handling of Afghan detainees have been accused of sympathizing with the enemy. Liberal Mark Holland was once deemed an “agent for the Taliban intelligence agency.” In his time, Stephane Dion was accused of both endangering Canadian soldiers and threatening the unity of the country. Later, when the opposition parties rallied together to form an alternative government they were said to wish to “destroy the country” and denounced as “traitors,” while one government MP warned of something approaching “sedition.”

You see, it is not simply that Mr. Harper’s political opponents are advised to shut the f— up, but that to do otherwise may be considered treasonous. And lest you think that this sort of restriction is isolated to the likes of Stéphane Dion, Michael Ignatieff, Gilles Duceppe and Jack Layton, remember that the Defence Minister once mused we should all be mindful of what we say in public, lest we embolden the Taliban.

All of which might be less problematic if Mr. Harper’s side hadn’t in fact so successfully scared the opposition—often with charges far less serious than those noted above—that it has seemed for the last few years only periodically willing to state an identifiable position that might be met with anything less than unanimous praise. (And if the press gallery, for that matter, hadn’t accepted furious scorn or fawning celebration as the only acceptable reactions to events here.)

Back though to the particular matter at hand.

“Let me tell members this,” Mr. Baird continued. “Canadians do not want to drag the abortion debate into the maternal and health discussions.”

You see, it is not simply that concerned individuals might best shut the f— up, but that the entire nation, by Mr. Baird’s estimate, would rather everyone shut the f— up about all of this. He might not be far wrong on this.

“This government and the Prime Minister are focused on how to make a positive difference in the lives of mothers and newborn children in the developing world,” Mr. Baird finished. “We want to find ways that unite Canadians, not divide them.”

An honourable pursuit that. But Mr. Rae was unpersuaded and, pressed again, Mr. Baird was compelled to invoke the “culture war” the Liberals are apparently (if so far ineffectively) waging.

Mr. Rae simplified his complaint, wondering aloud what the government’s “problem” was with “democracy itself.” Then Anita Neville stood and listed the groups and individuals alleged to have faced this government’s wrath, quite selflessly leaving her own party off the roll call.

Mr. Baird moaned of the Liberal plan to cleave Canadians “rural from urban,” “east from west,” and even “big city from small farm.” And when that point was exhausted he accused the opposition of impure fundraising practices.

Alas, our foremost voice of reconciliation was unable to bring peace—or at least fearful silence—with such stuff.

The Stats. Abortion, 10 questions. The oil industry, five questions. Firearms and crime, three questions each. Nuclear energy, the Supreme Court, Helena Guergis, economic development, foreign ownership, Omar Khadr and poverty, two questions each. The navy, ethics, forestry and firefighters, one question each.

John Baird, 15 answers. Vic Toews and Rob Nicholson, four answers each. Denis Lebel, three answers. Dave Anderson, James Moore, Deepak Obhrai, Jim Flaherty and Bev Oda, two answers each. Lynne Yelich, Leona Aglukkaq and Peter MacKay, one answer each.

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  • frobisher

    One senses a great deal of anger vented by the blogging Mr. Wherrey. And rightly so. The very suggestion that people (well, female people, aktchewelly) ought to keep their mouths shut and, by implication, their legs closed, lest the powers that be reign down their punitive vileness, is offensive in the extreme.

    Leave aside the fact that Senator Ruth is sympathetic to the cause. Her counsel, sadly, speaks volumes about The Way Things Work within the caucus she nominally sides with.

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

      I agree with your second paragraph fribisher; but the 'legs closed" part; I don't think that was the iimplication.

      Are you from Saskatchewan by any chance? (aktchewelly?)

      • frobisher

        No, ma'am. Though I did live in Calgary in the late eighties-early nineties. And, perhaps my comment was a bit over-the-top. However, the invitation to shut the f— up,combined with the willful inability to see that maternal issues in the 'third world' are inextricably linked to reproductive health are irksome. Combine that grim combo with the darkly whispered threat of sanctions from the Senator, the nutty asides from Pastor Abbot, the equivocations of Ms. Oda and the general caucus predilection towards ol' testament vengeance….well…the message to the ladies in da house is pretty much clear.

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

          Okay frobisher. You've convinced me. Thanks for explaining. I was teasing you about your spelling of "actually" because for some reason it reminded me of the way Saskatchewan is spelled.

  • albertaclipper

    I'm not a raving anti abortionist but I do believe that it is reprehensible that the Liberals have seen fit to drag this subject back into the light of day again. I don't believe abortion should be used as contraception but did believe that, as it was originally proposed, abortion was to be used to save the life of a mother to be who was in danger of losing her life. Now it is used for contraception plain and simple. This is the slippery slope (intention if the truth were told) that the left want the African countries to embrace. Would it not be better to use the money for better prenatal care? Very few Canadian women require abortions to save their lives today because there is better prenatal and post natal care. The not so secret agenda of the left is, they feel, the right to abort fetuses. It has nothing whatsoever to do with African women dying from childbirth and has everything to do with abortion and again nothing to do with saving women. As I wrote earlier….this is just a divisive subject that the LPC has sunk their teeth into heeding the advice of Frank Graves. I hope that the LPC run an election on this subject. I would rather have the Conservatives lose the election than ride into parliament as the governing party who won with abortion as one of their planks.

    • Holly Stick

      You seem to think a woman is nothing but a disposable container for a fetus. A woman's body belongs to her alone and she alone has the right to decide whether or not to continue a pregnancy. No one else has the right to interfere with a woman's personal sovereignty. Mind your own business and stay out of mine.

      In Africa women and children are often raped or do not have the choice to use contraception. Young girls and small, malnourished women are condemned to death if they are forced to carry a pregnancy to term. In most cases the fetus will die as well, and the woman's orphaned children are more likely to die also. So your discomfort with the moral choice to have an abortion means that you would choose instead to see a whole family die.

      It has everything to do with saving women.

      • albertaclipper

        You sweetie, can learn to cross your legs or be responsible in other ways. Your pregnancy is my business when I help pay for your abortion.

        Legal abortion was never meant to be used as a contraceptive option. Do some reading.

        And, if you read and understood, the money used on abortions could be used on pre and post natal help as well as those under nourished women. As for the rapes,IIRC, that was another reason for legal abortions. In that circumstance and I can agree. But as has been done in the western world abortion will be used as a contraceptive when someone hops into bed and that person ends up pregnant and goes for an abortion because her husband doesn't have red hair. Again it becomes my business because I'm paying for your mistake.

        • Gayle

          Actually, it is none of your business why someone wants an abortion. The entire point is that it is her body and her choice. What you believe she should do with her body is completely and totally irrelevant, in every sense of the word.

          Unless, of course, we taxpayers get to have a say in everyone's medical procedures. Want to have your appendix out? Sorry – have to run that one by the taxpayers first. Choose to have surgery to save the middle finger of your right hand rather than the cheaper option of amputation? Sorry – have to run that one by the taxpayers first. Have lung cancer because you hung out in too many bars in your youth? Sorry man – your choice. Why should I pay for your chemo?

          The real reason you do not like this issue is because it works to show how backwards Harper and his supporters are when it comes to women's rights. You have demonstrated that right here, because you clearly believe you should have some say on what a woman does with her body, just because of your own moral objections.

        • Gayle

          Hey – what if you go hunting and trip and fall and accidently shoot yourself with your own gun. Your choice to go hunting with a dangerous weapon – why should I pay for your life saving surgery?

          Hmmm. The possibilities are endless…

          • albertaclipper

            Wrong. Pregnancies are not medical "problems". They are a choice.Remember that word. And if not a choice they are a consequence of carelessness, unless it's an unwanted child of rape.

            So, my appendix is your responsibility because of universal health care in which abortion was not included until the left saw votes dancing before their eyes. (special interest groups you know) The Conservatives/conservatives held to their beliefs and didn't prostitute themselves for that vote.

            As for your body do with it as you please but don't cost me money.

            If I shoot myself with my gun that again is a "medical" emergency and again universal health care kicks in.

            Pregnancy is not a medical emergency here in Canada. Not all pregnancies in Africa are medical emergencies. The rapes are. Malnourished women with necessary funding can live through a pregnancy and delivery. That I believe, is how this whole thing started until Bob "I'm back" Rae intentionally muddied the waters and got all the special interest groups in a tizzy. Harper wanted funding for women and children (remember that from 6 weeks ago?) then the special interest groups (left wingers) saw a chance to sling some mud.

          • Holly Stick

            Then why should I pay for your prostate operation? If you won't pay for women's health care why shoudl I pay for men's?

            And if you think womaen are a "special interest group" it's not surprising you would have problems in a relationship with any woman with a brain.

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

            Do you really want to go into the "you ate too many french fries, so we won't pay for your artificial hip" story? You'd be amazed at what's classified as "non-emergency".

            Cuz if you do, you better start keeping your exercise and food consumption diary, and be ready to present it, and a urine sample, every time you need medical services that aren't immediate life and death.

          • Gayle

            This is a joke, right?

            People CHOOSE to go hunting with guns. Sometimes accidents happen and people get shot.

            People CHOOSE to drive a car in poor visibility conditions. Sometimes accidents happen as a result and people get hurt.

            As I said above, the possibilities are endless. Your opinion here rests on your own moral objections to abortion and your belief that a woman cannot control her own body.

            But thanks for proving my point – again.

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

          Under that logic, your smoking, drinking, driving, and eating habits are my business when I have to pay for your healthcare.

          You really want to go that road? Because trust me, you probably won't like what I suggest for a diet.

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

            Prefabricated meal pills for everyone!

        • The Real Jan

          And again – we're not allowed to make cracks about angry men from Alberta – I'm going to bite my tongue right off.

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

        Holly states: "You seem to think a woman is nothing but a disposable container for a fetus. A woman's body belongs to her alone and she alone has the right to decide whether or not to continue a pregnancy. No one else has the right to interfere with a woman's personal sovereignty. Mind your own business and stay out of mine. "
        ————————–

        And I will say to Holly: You must have heard of the women who have decided to get pregnant without the male's consent, yet those very same women will run to the male for child support……..

        And I will ask Holly: Do you still think the line " No one else has the right to interfere with a woman's personal sovereignty. Mind your own business and stay out of mine. " applies??????

        (I'm wondering out loud if Holly has the courage to answer that question in public)

    • sandy

      They are grasping, they need something .Anything.

    • Mike T.

      Somebody who thinks abortion should only be used to save the life of the mother IS a raving anti-abortionist, kiddo.

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

    Beautifully written. Thank you.

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

    I'm all for accountability. I would like know if these NGOs that lost their funding have achieved any results. Perhaps they should present some to the media in their defense. I'm sure there's ways to present the information in an objective consolidated manner for us to see what the money has been spent on. Although, not everyone understands the challenges of building capacity in oppressed/depressed communities.

    But it is also very important to note any clear patterns in what kinds of organizations are getting cut.

    • Holly Stick

      Prochoice, I would bet. Pro equality, which the Conservatives also oppose.

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

        You may be right Holly.

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

      Perhaps they should present some to the media in their defense. I'm sure there's ways to present the information in an objective consolidated manner for us to see what the money has been spent on.

      Assuming that an analysis was made, it shouldn't be a problem to stick it up on the appropriate ministry site. Mmmm… Smell that transparency.

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

      well given the Auditor General's recent remarks, it is clear that the decisions are unlikely to have been made based on any real sense of what does, or does not, work.

      "They don't have all the performance information, so it will be very difficult to make objective decisions when you don't have that kind of base information"
      http://www.ottawacitizen.com/Departments+flying+b…

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

      well given the Auditor General's recent remarks, it is clear that the decisions are unlikely to have been made based on any real sense of what does, or does not, work.

      "They don't have all the performance information, so it will be very difficult to make objective decisions when you don't have that kind of base information"
      http://www.ottawacitizen.com/Departments+flying+b…

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

      well given the Auditor General's recent remarks, it is clear that the decisions are unlikely to have been made based on any real sense of what does, or does not, work.

      "They don't have all the performance information, so it will be very difficult to make objective decisions when you don't have that kind of base information"
      http://www.ottawacitizen.com/Departments+flying+b…

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

    "Here, most conveniently, were four words to define this time in Ottawa."

    Was this post cathartic for you, Wherry? I hope so. I would have gone postal long ago if I was doing your job and listening to these clowns everyday. I wish pols of all parties took their jobs more seriously – all this talk about how to fix broken political system – and all we need is for MPs to act responsibly and behave themselves.

  • Out There

    Hmmm. Last time I checked, half of Canadian voters were women. My guess is that Senator Ruth's outburst and the possibly coincidental funding cuts to women's groups, are not especially likely to win over the hearts and minds of this half of the electorate.

    • cut the flab

      The last time I checked , I was still a woman and i'm afraid that I can't name one of these groups , what they do and why I should care . I've never needed them and theree are more important things I'd like to see my and my familys tax dollars spent on than new furniture in an overpriced downtown Vancouver office .

      • Holly Stick

        So you're ok with cutting funding for battered women's shelters. Let battered women be submissive to their fundamentalist husbands, right?

        • albertaclipper

          "Let battered women be submissive to their fundamentalist husbands, right?" Nobody said that.

          But if you want to share your special interest group wealth you can help fund an organization for husbands who are battered by their ex wives (who lied their asses off during the divorce) and their lawyers regarding visitation rights with their children.

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

            Oh come on Albertaclipper, give me some stats compared to women. And we're talking Africa here, even though you'd also be hard-pressed to make the arguement here in Canada with any significant stats on battered men comparted to battered women

          • albertaclipper

            I didn't make myself clear. I meant battered in court by the ex and the lawyer. Mental cruelty is also battering. When a guy comes home who thinks he has a happy marriage and finds his ex in bed with the plumber. Then she sweeps his kids out of his life with a left leaning "judge" who grants 4 days a month maybe with the kids??

          • Gayle

            "left leaning judge"…

            You conservatives – always the victim…

          • albertaclipper

            No more so than you liberals.

            Now I have to impregnate my wife and go hunting, not necessarily in that order. :>D

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

            Did the plumber bill you?

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

            You know.. if you had a better attitude toward women in the first place.. may not have happened.

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

            Come now, are you blaming the guy for his wife cheating on him? Seriously?

            If a person is unhappy, the solution is to leave (or have a conversation about open / alternative marriages), not endanger the other partner by letting them assume that their sexual relationship is exclusive.

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

            You sort of prove my point. A guy who is respectful of women is far more likely to find that a woman is willing to have a conversation with him about their unhappiness, and not simply try to take matters into their own (or the plumber's hands).

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

            I'm sorry but, in my opinion, there is no justification for cheating. A marriage is a contract (not that anyone actually takes their vows seriously). If, in that contract, it is agreed that you will be exclusive sexual partners, going outside of that means that you are responsible for what happens to your spouse (ala, STIs, etc.).

            Think of it this way: It is entirely possible for a cheating partner to acquire HIV and pass it to their spouse. Are you willing to say that a chauvinistic jerk has earned a death by AIDS?

            Sorry, but I have to go back to my original line. Leave, or have a conversation. Anything else is morally reprehensible.

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

            Oh I'm not saying it's justified. I'm just pointing out the realities.

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

            The Wikipedia article on Spousal Abuse has some interesting information in it. Worth a read.
            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domestic_violence#Ge…

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

            Not to downplay domestic violence IN ANY WAY, but…..from the wiki article I learned that the IT people at my workplace who look after our LAN and other such stuff aren't Information Technology professionals, they are Intimate Terrorism professionals.

            Who knew?

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

            Silly, Phil. lol

        • Orson Bean

          "fundamentalist husbands"

          Holly, if you're meaning to suggest that all wife-beaters are religious fundamentalists, or that the only people who beat their spouses are religious fundamentalists, I think you're seriously off-base there.

      • frobisher

        Thanks, Gwen.

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

      Such thinking is very sound — if you subscribe to the distasteful notion that all women must think alike. I am very happy I do not live in your world.

  • Holly Stick

    You converse with madeyoulook, who tells lies like this: "Fourteen taxpayer supported whine-grievance-monger organizations…"

    You self-righteous hypocrite.

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

      Holly, out of curiosity, did you march in the sixties?

      • Holly Stick

        What difference would that make?

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

          None whatsoever; I was just curious. Were you involved back then?

          • Holly Stick

            I wasn't old enough to march or to know much about it, there wasn't much action where I lived as far as I know, and my family was not inclined to get involved in politics. But I was surrounded by strong, intelligent women, and men who did not feel the need to prove their manhood by being jerks.

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

            Thanks for answering. When did you start getting involved in politics?

          • Holly Stick

            In a way, there were political episodes in school and more in university. I joined various activist groups but never any political parties. I also held some opinions then which have radically changed now.

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

            Many thanks, again. Final question: Which federal party do you think has been the most pro-women: Liberals or NDP? And why?

          • The Real Jan

            How do you define pro-women?

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

    I expect a rather broad brush is being taken in this thread by now.

  • Oliver

    No matter how right the Liberals are about how the CPC behaves, people don't care about things like this.
    People want to see results and so far the CPC has done pretty good on that front (though they certainly don't deserve all the credit they think they do).

    The Liberals need to realize that to get back into power they need to be very patient and stop jumping at every little thing the Conservatives do. They might only have a minority and not quite behave like it but people don't care about that (hell most people I know who like the CPC love it).
    The CPC promised a whole lot of things when they got into power in 2006, most of them were on the topic of behaviour and most of them haven't been kept, but those promises were the flavour of the day, people don't care about that kind of stuff anymore.
    The detainee issue was a good try but since it also involves the previous government and it isn't going anywhere, let it run it's course and be patient.
    The Liberals also need to raise more money.

    • Holly Stick

      The detainee issue involves the current government. Why do you think Harper is so desperate to cover it up?

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

      "…people don't care about things like this. "

      Are you secretly providing helpful election advice to the Liberal Party of Canada?
      Or are you trying to make this go away by repeating "Nobody cares" so many times that nobody cares anymore?

      Besides, we know people care. You cared enough to post a comment. I cared enough to expose your transparent attempt at damage control? See? That's two people who care already.

      • Oliver

        Definitely giving advice to the LPC, I care a lot about things like these: I'm all about symbolism.
        But I think that the general population doesn't care much for mud slinging, and the more it happens the less they think of the people involved in it. And these days that's all the Liberals have done: jump on everything they could and try to damage the image of the CPC.
        Fact of the matter, as far as we know, it ain't working.

  • janke

    What else does one say to a perpetual whiny ,sniviling, bellyaching group of childish politicians who keep pushing the broken pencil ?
    When the brat kid keeps whining after logic, then stronger messages have to be conveyed in order to get compliance.

  • Memi

    Aaron Wherry

    Well said!

    Bully-Baird frothing at the mouth, making “domestic House assault” a looming threat and scaring the heck out of those faint at heart while “condemning” as “inappropriate” Sen. Ruth’s wonderfully insightful and spot-on commentary on the Taliban-on-the-Hill Party of Canada…..what a nightmarish sight to behold!

    Over $22 billion has been spent buying tanks and fighter-bombers fighting the Taliban rather than spend $5 billion on a much-needed by single mothers Child Care plan. It tells you where their priorities are.

    But the question by women voters should be, Why in God’s name are we spending money to fight the Taliban continents away?

    The Taliban are here already. On the Hill!

    What this government needs is:

    a POLITICAL THERAPEUTIC ABORTION! Enough already

    It’s getting lonely and embarrasing on the world stage where they don’t even recognize Canada! The land of Pearson the Nobel Peace Prize Winner, Tommy Douglas the father of Medicare and yes, Joe Clark, that decent, honourable Prime Minister of Canada to whom none of the Reformer Cavemen can hold a candle to!

    Shame we’ve come to this, eh?

  • Yosh

    No funding to the special interest group period.

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