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

Dept. of protesting way too much

by Paul Wells on Monday, July 12, 2010 9:27am - 0 Comments

This is farcical.

“…non-partisanship and constitutional knowledge were key… ‘A blatant partisan would not have made it’… ‘The members were guided by one key question…: “Will the next Governor General be able to serve without partisanship?”‘…When asked why the Prime Minister would include the directive about partisanship, Mr. Soudas replied that it is because the position is non-partisan…Ned Franks, who was not consulted, said that by raising the issue of partisanship, the government gave the committee a crucial understanding that candidates with strong partisan ties would be discouraged…’My impression is that the committee would probably consider strong previous partisanship as a … handicap’…”

Does anybody else feel a sudden urge to check their wallets? Now here’s the fun thing. After repeating eight times the phoned-in claim that this is all about non-partisanship, the Globe cheerfully lists — for the second time in three days — the members of the super-non-super-anti-don’t-even-think-about-partisanship committee without lifting a finger to tell us about them.

Three minutes’ googling would tell you Chris Manfredi and Rainer Knopff have built long and fruitful careers drinking each other’s intellectual bathwater and that, while Manfredi’s “lessons on the power of the courts and judicial appointments were constantly helpful” to Ian Brodie, he didn’t put his signature after Ted Morton’s and Stephen Harper’s on the Alberta firewall letter. But Knopff did.

Here’s Manfredi testifying before a Commons committee on Supreme Court appointments — not the same, but germane. He tosses cold water on the notion that such appointments could ever be non-political, arguing instead for transparency in the selection process.

To me, none of this delegitimizes any aspect of the process that led to David Johnston’s selection. I sort of figured a Conservative prime minister would turn to Conservatives in his choice of an important appointment. The people on the selection committee weren’t staring loons; those are all on the Rights and Democracy board. But shooing Dimitri Soudas away while turning to Rainer Knoppf is a distinction without a difference, and a Sunday devoted to extravagant claims of non-partisanship is a Sunday spent trying desperately to change the channel from one of the most disgusting editorial endorsements of the past 30 years. And it worked a charm, didn’t it.

Reporters aren’t actually required to be stenographers when writing about all this.

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  • canucksitanian

    This post is a fine example of why Paul Wells rocks!

    To add to the "Yes Minister" paraphrasing:

    "…and The Sun is read by people who have rusted out trucks on cinder blocks in their front yards with Confederate flag bumper stickers."

    I like Margolis though.

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

    Didn't give the opposition thugs a chance to use the Gwyn Morgan gambit and have our boy
    go into a terminal pout.
    Of course Mr. Ignatieff would have squinted, clenched and unclenched his tiny pale hands,
    and said "whatever".

  • Dee

    Yeah, you're right Paul that it was a "disgusting editorial endorsement" of the GG from the Toronto Sun. But you're surprised the Sun would do this? Really?

    And in terms of outright odiousness it hardly comes close to a recent editorial from a certain, formerly-esteemed national newsmagazine: http://www2.macleans.ca/2010/07/06/g20-thugs-dont…

  • Kaplan

    "…shooing Dimitri Soudas away while turning to Rainer Knoppf is a distinction without a difference…"

    Ouch. Now I actually feel bad for Rainer.

  • Mulletaur

    What a nice partisan payback for keeping Airbus out of the Mulroney inquiry it is, being made Governor General and all. That's why it's such a non-partisan appointment. Yup, sure is. Compliant GG for the next prorogation as well. It's good to be the King !

    • Jan

      But he's SO qualified…

  • Wascally Wabbit

    I guess Sir Humphrey should have the last word (substitute GG here)..

    "Getting the PM to choose the right bishop is like a conjuror getting a member of the audience to choose a card. With the Church of England the choice is usually beyween a knave and a queen!"

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

    Remarkably Wells got duped along with the entirety of the Canadian media. There really was no change in process in selecting this GG at all. Harper picked who he wanted. Yes, the process whereby Harper got his advice changed, but the reality is Harper probably had his own opinions and may well have spoken to many other advisers in addition to this committee.

    Of course, technically the decision could only be Harper's and he really had no process to delegate it to any committee. If the list of suggestions was made public, that would be a change in process, perhaps even if the committee and its mandate were made public. However, pulling stuff out after the fact simply does not change anything.

    ps it was still a very good selection by PM Harper.

  • SunshineCoaster

    I read a quote from one of David Johnston's colleagues at Waterloo Univesity. He said David Johnston's job at Waterloo was to say yes to everything. Perhaps this could be the single most important reason Harper will appoint him Governor General and also the single most important reason that Canadians should be alarmed. This is not the kind of comment that would be made about anyone familiar with making hard decisions like whether to prorogue or dissolve Parliament instead of asking a coalition of parties to form a government.

  • orval

    PM Harper picked who he wanted. The independent selection committee provided non-partisan cover and ensured the appointment was politically bullet-proof ("Ignatieff Applauds Appointment of Ignatieff-Clone as Next GG").

    I imagine PM Harper wants to break this media obsession about GG's being celebrities and go back to the days when no-body knew or cared who the GG was, without having to go way way back to the olden days of has-been political hacks becoming GG

  • Olaf

    Hi Paul,

    I wonder if you'd care to reconsider your conflation of 'partisan' with 'ideologue'. They are distinct concepts. There are many ideological 'conservatives' that are not partisan in any meaningful sense, indeed, many of which vociferously oppose the current government. Knopff is firmly committed to 'representative democracy', judicial deference and other ideological objectives, not 'the electoral fortunes of the Conservative Party of Canada' or similar partisan objectives. Equating Knopff with Soudas on the 'partisanship' scale is quite silly, in my opinion.

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

      You probably have a point. I'd wager, however, that I know how Knopff votes in federal elections.

      That being said, my real point is subtler than this morning rant implies, and that's why I'm going to revisit all this in my column for the next print edition.

      • Olaf

        Lovely, I look forward to it. And for the record, I don't think you don't have a point (you probably do), I just don't think you made one here.

        • Holly Stick

          A reply to Knopff and Morton, pointing out that:

          "…they do not engage in a discussion of what is, or in making arguments about how we might understand or explain what is, rather than on constantly judging what is according to our own personal and partisan political prejudices…"
          http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstr…

          Sounds like the kind of people who prefer their own biases to the evidence, and to govern by polls rather than the StatsCan long census form.

          • Olaf

            Oh, someone they criticized is criticizing them in return? Well, debate over then. They must be hopelessly partisan, and she must be an unbiased oracle of truth. Glad we've cleared that up.

            Also, great research. A lot can be established by reading something in the abstract of a paper that you agree with and then quoting it.

  • chet

    If one were to read today's (largely leftist) media coverage of senate or judicial appointments,

    one would get the impression that up until conservative rule, political affiliation played no part in the process – that the heretofore politically pure, lilly white process under the Liberals has been forever tainted by the only party capable of partisanship (or generall ill for country for that matter).

    • Orson Bean

      I wouldn't say that's the prevailing view in the media. It's certainly the prevailing view expressed by many of the Liberal Party of Canada partisans who post comments here, but that's a different matter . . .

      • chet

        You would be incorrect. Journalists are overwhelmingly left leaning. Study after study shows it. Honest journos everywhere admit it. Dishonest ones deny it, but mostly they'll provide a non denial coupled with a "but we can still be objective".

        Except they can't. They're basting in it. In their work and friendship circles, carried over from their far left University humanities education – from the basic premise to a story, to what gets covered or what facts are highlighted and what are ignored, it's not even close. Yes there are exceptions, but those are the ones labelled "far right" by the rest of the herd.

        Journolist is just the latest glaring example. The coverage (as compared to the bare facts now readily available on the net) of course is the proof in the pudding.

      • chet

        So the latest example – the press thought they had the scandal of the century with the Afghan detainee issue. Except it was outrageous only to their brethern – far leftists. The rest of Canadians shake their head and wonder if there could possibly be more pressing issues other than whether a captured terrorist half way around the world was slapped by a captor…and wonder why they're still buying the Globe and Mail.

  • chet

    As for Mr. Tribe's reference to Khadr,

    I encourage Liberals to continue to defend this poor misundersood "child" ,for on this issue, like so many others by our completely-in-touch-with-average-Candians media,

    raising a terrorist, who avowed to kill every man woman (and of course our little children in those day cares the Jihadis love to bomb) as a cause celebre, resonates so well with average folk.

  • inge

    Thanks for the article, Paul.
    P.S. Enjoyed your introduction of The Hannaford Street Silver Band the other night.

  • jet

    I think the Sun's point mostly concerned the fact of rampant reverse discrimination in our politically correct society and was lauding the government for the balls to pick a non-minority. I'm not saying it was classy but as I think the overall point of putting merit before race is a good point.
    And Wells maybe find some genuinely points rather than vaguely pointing out the protesting too much is clear evidence that the protesting has a false premise.

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

    If the process was so good … the Prime Minister would probably not mind having a press conference where he could reply to the questions of professional journalists, who are well equipped to do research, *why* the process was so good.

    Maybe the Prime Minister could provide his "White House Photographer" style photographs of the selection committee meeting. Maybe a transcript of deliberations could be provided to citizens.

    This process *was* undertaken for the benefit of the citizens of Canada … wasn't it ?

  • Lord Kitchener's Own

    "SUNshine girl Crystal, 24, is a Toronto Argos cheerleader and wants to own a beach house and fitness studio. The hazel-eyed Leo enjoys hot yoga, spinning and tanning on the beach as well as hanging out with her girlfriends and football Sundays. Her favourite way to spend time off is lying by the pool with a good novel".

    Sorry, I got distracted, AGAIN. Was there something about the Governor General designate there too???

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

    unscripted press conference?

    you must have Mr Harper confused with someone accountable and transparent

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

    Better than what we get down where I live. The Sun has taken over all the little county newspapers and we get the same opinion nonsense that Toronto gets and hey, what used to be a little column inside the paper – the Police Report is front page news.

    I don't buy it anymore.

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

    A partisan group set up to make a non-partisan choice for maximum partisan benefit.

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