If we’re cutting useless things in Ottawa

WELLS: It’s time to fire half the cabinet

by Paul Wells on Friday, July 23, 2010 9:00am - 0 Comments

Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

Finally, the serious business of tearing down the Canadian federal state has begun.

The opening shots in these great battles are always so nondescript. Mighty oaks from tiny acorns grow. And in much the same way, the business of cramming the mighty oak of overgrown government back into an acorn starts with a little hedge trimming. And so it is the long-form census questionnaire that forms the first beachhead of the Harper government’s assault on big government.

It took a while. Federal program spending grew from $175 billion in 2005 to $229 billion in 2009. Truly, this is liberty’s darkest hour. But in the fight for freedom, one lonely soldier has never budged from his foxhole, except sometimes to chase foxes, but that’s another story.

Two years ago I was told, by a senior public servant and by a former employee in Maxime Bernier’s political office, that the randy MP from the Beauce had taken a particular dislike to the work of Statistics Canada when he was named industry minister in 2006. It’s StatsCan, after all, that asks citizens prying questions. It’s census data that are used as a basis for program design. And, too often, it’s census data that are used to judge the success of government programs against observable fact instead of random guesswork.

If you’re like me and Max Bernier, you’re not afraid to call all this by its real name: Communism. “Fundamentally,” Bernier wrote the other day on the Western Standard’s Shotgun Blog, “my position is that whatever the presumed usefulness of these data, I don’t believe it justifies forcing people to answer intrusive questions about their lives, under threat from a fine or jail time if they don’t.”

Sometimes the future is so shiny and new we hardly dare gaze upon its face. But here was the brave new world in all its freedom-loving glory: a deposed former cabinet minister, writing on the website of a defunct magazine, about a soon-to-be-discredited federal program. Unscrew the doors themselves from their jambs! I love the smell of napalm in the morning.

But here’s the thing: the revolution must not end here. Once we’re done gutting the census—sorry, I mean scattering the quinquennial bean-counting armies of tyranny—it will be time to move on to the next hill. What on Earth can the Harper government do for an encore?
At first I thought we could eliminate the penny. Do you have spare change in your bedroom? I knew it! The state will get in there any way they can! But once again, that’s small change. Forgive the pun. It’s time to think bigger. It’s time to fire half the cabinet.

Fundamentally, my position is that whatever the presumed usefulness of these people, I don’t believe it justifies forcing people to pay for their chauffeured cars and putting up with their really bad imitations of competent administrators. When we roll back the state, let’s roll it right over this crew:

Josée Verner. Who? Precisely. She’s the minister of intergovernmental affairs, president of the Queen’s Privy Council for Canada and minister for La Francophonie. Already that title is way too long. And yet teams of scientists working in underground caverns with sensitive instruments can find no evidence that she works for a living. Her website shows that the minister responsible for federal-provincial relations has visited two provincial capitals, Quebec City and Toronto, in 2010, and that she has given no speech worth preserving since 2009. If she were fired tomorrow nobody would never notice. Don’t believe me? Let’s find out.

John Baird. The minister of transport. Have you flown in an airplane lately? After emptying your briefcase, displaying your lotions and ointments to a line of uniformed strangers, and enduring a random pat-down at the hands of security agents who flunked out of charm school, filling out a long-form census questionnaire starts to look like a monastery retreat in comparison.

Jason Kenney, Vic Toews and Peter MacKay. The ministers of immigration, public safety and defence. Because if you think a questionnaire is an invasion of your privacy, just try to imagine what a refugee-board hearing, a jailhouse or an infantry battalion could do.

Jim Prentice. The minister of the environment. Because who is he kidding?

Lawrence Cannon. The minister of foreign affairs. Because how do we keep track of all those teeny countries? We ask them. And we have no right to pry like that.

Tony Clement. The minister of industry. Because (a) he still administers the agricultural long-form census, which is as bad as the general long-form census, plus it has cows; (b) since Max Bernier is able to set policy from the backbenches, how hard can it be?; (c) just look at the guy. He’s dying up there.

Jim Flaherty. The minister of finance. Taxes. Spends. No good can come of this.
When it’s over, and the jackboot of the state has finally been pried from the neck of the law-abiding taxpayer, we’ll wonder how we ever put up with such pervasive tyranny. We’ll be 33 million people living in liberty. Give or take a few million.

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  • Ex-Pat NFLDer

    I never took Wells for the liberal hack he continues to show himself as, where was this joker when the liberal were robbing us blind and bouncing from one scandle to the next.Pointing out the goverments flaws is fine by me, but onesided personal attacks are just that, but when you try and pass it journalism,now you belong with the CTV,CBC,G&M or the libstar,hey Macleans with people like wells on the pay roll you are starting to fall into the same catagory as the other liberal mouth pieces of this country a shame really.

    • NiceGuy

      Wells was busy attacking the conservative opposition…he's a true Red Star Liberal like the rest. Chretien was one of his most favourite thugs.

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

        Oceania has always been at war with Eastasia.

  • CDN

    Every now and then Macleans comes up with thoughtful well researched articles on the world scene. These articles went a long way to justifying my subscription. Lately, it seems that all I am reading (web or print) are biased frenzied columnists with very little to actually say, stories about media personalities (I don't care) and whatever the current bias of the editorial opinion is in the good news/bad news section. At least Steyn offered an alternative viewpoint – where is he?

    Perhaps Macleans should replace their map of Canada (the one that says Toronto/Sort of Quebec & Not Toronto ) with a map of the world and go back to journalism.

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

      He's got a point. Why the hell isn't Steyn writing the Paul Wells column?

      • orval

        Like CDN I was wondering too. I would never subscribe to Macleans but I could until recently count on Inkless Wells to be insightful most of the time, and proof that there was at least one who still believed in the craft of journalism. Lame ad hominen name-calling used to be beneath Paul Wells. Has there be an editorial policy change? Too bad. Good-bye Inkless Wells. It was a good run.

      • Thwim

        Not enough xenophobia in the Wells column format for Steyn.

        That, and too much jazz.

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

      " At least Steyn offered an alternative viewpoint – where is he?"

      Probably at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem with Helmet Head.

  • Bwhistle

    Speaking of useless – how about a gaggle of Canadian reporters hanging around the gate to Black's Florida home, then breathlessly reporting the fascinating fact that a vehicle just left… Ottawa is overloaded with media people reporting entirely boring and useless meetings, committees etc and raking through the garbage left by people who do things in the hope of finding another Watergate under the soiled pizza box. – cull the lot of them.

  • linlal

    Just a question, shouldIsellyourwheat. How do you know I have wheat to sell without the agri-census?

    (And, yes, I know who that quote came from and the circumstances around it.)

  • Dot

    Harper's PM tenure: a personal cluster f'**k. Because he can. And it's the pinnacle.

  • COOPER

    BRAVO

  • Mike

    Paul. This is why I check your blogs/column everyday, because sometimes it is pure genious.

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

    Imagine my disappointment upon poring over the list of "useless things" in Ottawa to cut. Although "half the cabinet" may sound about right, one might wish to start with the Ministers for Regional Development of Whichever Square Inch of Territory We Hadn't Yet Thought Of .

  • JFJ

    Face it. Government is the world's biggest crime organization. It extorts our wealth and redistributes it, and it's all legal. No other organization is legally allowed to use violence against citizens to carry out its business.

  • Alethia77

    The scary thing is that most of the data relevant to the Canadian census is already available in Government/Financial Data banks. So long as the privacy watchdog was overseeing the process so individuals are in no way identified, most Canadians would hardly object to utilizing it for census purposes.

    Its going to take more than the census issue to wean us off dependency of the nanny-state. The state is entrusted with too much of our personal data. Worse are banks, financial institutions, credit rating companies& advertisement companies. Who sell our data when they feel like they want to. The only thing the government to make things better is to beat them down with a stick.

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

    Tom Flanagan said on CBC's Power & Politics today that the gov't is probably ramping up spending in the Communications budget because an election is coming some time down the road and the gov't wants to be sure to get it's message out.

    So, that means that the Conservative Reform Alliance Party of Canada is spending my tax dollars for electioneering purposes instead of on sound policies? And at the same time they're trying to cut the stipend given to the other parties so that they can't realistically compete in getting THEIR message out next election?

    We know that Harper won't force an election until his latest fiascoes are behind him a bit and he pushs through his election reform package. I think the Liberals and the NDP need to defeat this loser as soon as the gov't returns this fall and put and end to this garbage.

    I never thought I would live long enough to see this kind of fascism in Canada. My father and grandfather, who both fought for our freedoms in WW1 & WW2 would be rolling in their grave if they knew. Hopefully they'll haunt Harper's dreams every night!

  • prescott

    One of your best columns yet! Great fun!

  • jade_lee

    How come Coyne gets an invite to join jim and the rich guys on vacation/scrum and not you? Slowly the gatekeepers are being exposed for the douche bags they are…….too harsh? Need to redact?

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