Roundup: A spineless premier in the centre of a dispute

The suspicious fire of a lobster pound used by the Mi’kmaq in Nova Scotia is the latest escalation in the fisheries dispute in that province, which prompted a number of calls over the weekend for the federal government to do something. But when you ask for specifics, people tend to come up with a bunch of hand-waving and not a lot of answers. As a reminder, policing is a provincial responsibility, and in Nova Scotia, the RCMP are contracted to the province. This means that it’s the province’s responsibility to ensure that the RCMP are doing their jobs and protecting the Mi’kmaq people from the mobs of angry commercial fishers that are threatening them, and not just standing there and watching it happen like they did during the swarming of a lobster pound last week.

Of course, the premier keeps trying to insist that he can’t solve the problem and demands that the federal government define what a “moderate livelihood” for the Mi’kmaq people is under their treaty rights (which, to be clear, the government has been at the negotiation table about for weeks now), which is a cynical exercise in buck-passing from a premier who make a big song and dance about admitting that the province was mired in systemic racism. Funny that when it’s in his face, he doesn’t want to do anything about it. On Saturday, the province’s attorney general finally requested additional support for the RCMP from the federal government, which Bill Blair immediately granted, days after he publicly stated that there were resources waiting to be deployed to the province upon request, which they had not done up until that point. A bunch of people (including Jagmeet Singh) also started chirping over Twitter that this attack was “terrorism,” except that it’s not – the Criminal Code has a very specific definition, and a mob is not it. One of the Indigenous chiefs at the centre of the dispute also mused over social media that the military should be called in, but again, this can’t be done without the request of the provincial government, and I cannot stress this enough, but you do not want the military to conduct law enforcement. It’s a VERY, VERY BAD THING.

Meanwhile, both the fisheries minister and the NDP are now calling for an emergency debate in Parliament over this, which seems to me to be the most useless thing imaginable, but what can you do? Erin O’Toole is also trying to pin the blame on the federal government, insisting that they should have had the negotiations over by now (how? By imposing a solution?) and blaming the federal government for not properly resourcing the RCMP in the province (who are under provincial contract and jurisdiction), but then again, truth hasn’t exactly been his strong suit of late. But this shouldn’t be an issue about the treaty – the government has signalled that they will protect those rights, and are just figuring out the details. Protection of the Mi’kmaq fishers and their property should be a police matter, which is provincial jurisdiction, but so long as the premier is too afraid of the white voters, I don’t see him exactly taking a strong stand on this issue anytime soon, and while all eyes turn back to Justin Trudeau to do something, anything, he doesn’t exactly have the levers at his disposal.

Good reads:

  • Dominic LeBlanc says that the government is considering taking a stake in the two major airlines (as opposed to writing them a blank cheque).
  • Patty Hajdu is appealing to the Alberta government to not end their opioid safe injection programme in the spring, as they plan to.
  • The 40,000 ventilators that the government ordered from Canadian manufacturers are being delivered, but may not be used at the current state of the pandemic.
  • The House of Commons is installing plexiglass barriers in certain parts of the building because MPs aren’t properly distancing, and it’s affecting the pages.
  • Erin O’Toole appeared at an event with Jason Kenney with no masks or distancing, with O’Toole claiming he can’t give or get the virus for another four months. Err…
  • At the UCP’s annual general meeting, a slim majority voted in favour of a policy of adopting a private healthcare option in parallel to the public one.
  • Chantal Hébert accuses the government of having a short attention span as she castigates them for not fulfilling any of their promises.

Odds and ends:

For my latest Loonie Politics video, I discuss Pierre Poilievre’s attack against the Bank of Canada, and his implication that they are political actors.

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One thought on “Roundup: A spineless premier in the centre of a dispute

  1. Buck-passing premiers, finger-pointing opposition hypocrites, media paparazzi hounds with a p!ss poor education in civics. Gee, what would the political establishment do if they didn’t have Trudeau to kick around? A part of me at the back of my mind still wonders if he won’t wash his hands of the incurable dysfunction of #cdnpoli sooner rather than later and, like McNeil himself did earlier this year, say “I’ll stick around until the pandemic is done” and then leave the warring factions to figure shxt out. They expect him to solve a 400-year problem in five, but if he went in there guns a-blazing, they’d accuse him of being a dictator. And all the while, as a race war is brewing and a pandemic still rages, the opposition is *still* having their circlejerk about the stupid WeGhazi nonsense. I can see him getting tired of this blame-game crap and staying the blazes home. Why can’t Canada be like New Zealand? Because “Trudeau bad” is the easy knee-jerk response when you don’t want to do your own actual work.

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