Monthly Archives: October 2013

TIME TO DEBATE THE RULES OF CANADA’S POLITICAL GAME

(Graphic by CFAX 1070)

(Graphic by CFAX 1070)

“Inside baseball.” When I covered politics in British Columbia, I often heard that term used to dismiss stories about the lack of openness and accountability in Canada’s predominant political system. But I think those stories should have a centre field position in the press and among the people. I’ll be talking about why Friday morning on Victoria radio station CFAX 1070 at 8:20 PT with talk show host Ryan Price.

POLITICAL SYSTEM A POINT OF PRIDE FOR CANADIANS

In Canada, ignorance may be bliss — at least when it comes to our political system.

Almost all of the decision-making within that system happens in private spaces — such as caucus or cabinet meetings — hidden from public scrutiny.

Yet, according to a 2012 online poll conducted by The Environics Institute, most Canadians take pride in our political system and feel it’s important to support it.

Canadians think it's important to support our political system, according to a recent poll. (Graphic by Vanderbilt University)

Canadians think it’s important to support our political system, according to a recent poll. (Graphic by Vanderbilt University)

That poll was part of the AmericasBarometer project, a biennial survey of democracy and governance in the Americas.

It asked 1,501 Canadians to rate — on a scale of one to seven — how much should citizens support the political system, with seven being a lot and one being not at all.

Seventy percent responded with a five, six or seven. Sixty-five percent gave the same ratings when asked how proud they were of our political system.

In fact, Canadians were “among the most likely” in the hemisphere to express strong pride in their political system — a rating of six or seven.

Of course, there are a few caveats.

The number of respondents who expressed such strong pride declined 24 points between 2006 and 2012 — going from 63 to 39 percent.

The survey also found just 51 percent respect the political institutions of Canada.

And, while 70 percent were very satisfied or satisfied with how democracy works in this country, just 11 percent believe those who govern the country are interested in what citizens think.

To me, all of that suggests Canadians may believe the failings of our political system have less to do with it’s structure and more to do with the parties and personalities in it.

But I’ll have more to say about that in a future posting.

THE UNKNOWABLE COUNTRY

Suzanne Legault, the country's information commissioner, is demanding more openness from government. But how important is that openness to Canadians? (Photograph by Office of the Information Commissioner)

Suzanne Legault, the country’s information commissioner, is demanding more openness from government. But how important is that openness to Canadians? (Photograph by Office of the Information Commissioner)

“Freedom of information is the expression of Canadians’ core values. It is fundamental to the functioning of democracy.”

Canada’s information commissioner, Suzanne Legault, made that pronouncement earlier this month in a news release urging a modernization of the laws that allow public access to public records.

But, while it’s undeniable that transparency is the mother of accountability, our core values — and whether freedom of information expresses them — are debatable.

Legault’s office hasn’t polled Canadians to test that contention. A spokesperson for the office said it doesn’t have a mandate to survey citizens about their attitudes toward information issues — unlike the country’s better-funded privacy commissioner.

But the best indication of our core values might not be found in any poll. Instead, it might be found in our continued support for Canada’s predominant political system — which is 116 years older than the country’s access to information law.

In that system, decision-making rarely happens in the sunshine of our legislatures.

Instead, it happens in dark, private spaces — such as caucus and cabinet meetings — whose secret proceedings are protected by pledges of confidentiality and fortified by the force of law.

It is there, and often only there, that our representatives can express dissenting views. But even then they may risk punishment for doing so.

Outside those spaces, our representatives are usually expected to vote and voice the party line — regardless of whether it’s inconsistent with their views and those of their constituents.

That means a party with a majority has the power to get whatever it wants in our legislatures — public spaces where government decisions are disclosed but almost never defeated or amended without the government’s consent.

The underlying assumption behind this political system is that privacy is necessary for decision-making.

It’s an assumption expressed in our freedom of information laws, which put Canada’s most informative records under lock and key.

For example, the federal Access to Information Act doesn’t allow access to caucus documents and it usually protects cabinet documents from prying eyes for 20 years.

The act also allows the government to refuse access to any documents that contain advice for cabinet ministers.

And it can keep accounts of “consultations or deliberations” that include cabinet ministers or their staff out of public hands.

In other words, on paper, our top political officials are ghosts in the machinery of government.

It is they who pull the levers. And, yet, their fingerprints are often rendered invisible to the citizens they supposedly represent.

It’s easy to disagree with such opacity — making it easy, as Legault has, to conclude that freedom of information is the expression of our core values.

Yet I wonder how many Canadians would disagree with the assumption that privacy is necessary for decision-making?

Because once you accept that assumption, as many of our political leaders have, it becomes easier to reject requests for information about such decisions.

What that says about our core values is admittedly debatable. It suggests freedom of information is not an expression of those values or, at the very least, that we have conflicting values.

But what’s undeniable is that, at the beginning of the twenty-first century, we find ourselves residents of an unknowable country.

It is a nation of the governed rather than the self-governed – a place where transparency is routinely sacrificed on the high altar of peace, order and what some would call good governance.

In this monthly column for J-Source and The Tyee, I’ll be continuing this conversation, mapping the boundaries of openness and accountability in Canada and exploring what they mean for the people, the press and the powerful.

I invite you to be a participant online and at the column’s Facebook page, as well as at The Tyee and J-Source, where this column is syndicated.