Paul Martin, thank
goodness, is promising that the bad old days of Liberal waste and
corruption are over. He says he will cut taxes and spending, and
deliver value for money. He will somehow make the West feel better
about Ottawa. He will reform Parliament, and close the
"democratic deficit."
Let's hope so.
Consider these news stories from the past week or so.
There was the case
of Charles Boyer, former assistant to Heritage Minister Sheila Copps,
who burned through $28,000 in two years by eating out three or four
times a day on the public tab. Far from being fired, he is now a
lobbyist who makes a living connecting paying clients with his former boss.
Then we learned
about Pierre Theberge, director of the national art gallery. In the
five years since Chretien appointed him, he has racked up personal
expenses of $600,000. Among his more notable achievements was a $1-million
art show he funded in the prime minister's riding of Shawinigan this
summer. (This is in addition to the $1.8 million Ottawa spent on some
sort of equestrian multimedia spectacle in Shawinigan this month.)
As well, we have
the ongoing scandal of Governor-General Adrienne Clarkson spending $1
million touring northern Europe with 60 left-liberal friends for no
evident reason except that they can and want to.
We learned last
week that the new deputy minister of Public Works, David Marshall,
has formally warned his employees to clean up their act. In July the
department was forced to re-tender a $1-billion contract it had
awarded to Royal LePage. An internal fraud investigation concluded
there had been a potential conflict of interest serious enough that
they cancelled the whole thing.
Also in July, a
Public Works payroll specialist working at RCMP headquarters was
charged with 10 counts each of fraud and theft for allegedly paying
himself $250,000 illegally. Meanwhile, RCMP are investigating two
other employees and several companies for paying for reports that
were never written. Last week we learned that the RCMP are also
investigating the federal Liberal Party's Quebec wing.
(And let's not
forget Auditor-General Sheila Fraser's scathing indictment of Public
Works officials last spring for breaking "nearly every rule in
the book" in the awarding of culture and recreation grants,
especially in Quebec.)
This Tuesday we
learned that Liberals, Tories, NDP and Bloc MPs (but not the
Alliance) support a $30-million plan to give each MP $100,000 in pocket-change
to hand out to constituency groups (amateur hockey clubs,
environmental initiatives, women's shelters, etc.). Why? Because this
is how they do things in Quebec provincially. If Martin lets the idea
go ahead, it's how we'll do things nationally as well.
But now we're to
believe this is all in the past. Martin told reporters after his
leadership ratification on Monday, "This was a vote for
different ways of doing things. It's very, very important to
understand just what a fundamental shift in the way the government is
going to operate is really going to occur over the course of the months."
It would be very,
very important if within this impenetrable bafflegab there is an
actual plan to bring in a lot of new people and a new attitude. And
maybe there is. But keep in mind that Martin has brought 90% of the
old party along with him. Keep in mind as well that Martin himself
was at the cabinet table when all these scandals, and dozens of
others, were going on.
Not to be a
pessimist, but I suspect that the public attitude which pervades
Ontario and Quebec also pervades the Liberal Party. It's the
complacent attitude that nothing is fundamentally wrong with the system.
I expect we'll
hear some catchy new phrases and slogans for a while, but the ship
will continue on its previous course. Despite the brave talk, as long
as Ontario and Quebec remain loyally Liberal, Paul Martin has no need
and no mandate to change anything.
- Link Byfield
Link Byfield is
chairman of the Edmonton-based Citizens Centre for Freedom and Democracy.
"Just
Between Us" is a feature service of the Citizens Centre for
Freedom and Democracy. The purpose of the Citizens Centre is to
improve the quality of life for all Canadians by promoting policies
that foster individual initiative and personal responsibility.