The Bridge with Peter Mansbridge - Good Talk - Did The Public Follow The Convoy Inquiry?
Episode Date: November 25, 2022Journalists spent a lot of the past weeks covering the convoy commission but was the public actually following the story? Chantal and Bruce have a lot to say about the commission as it wraps up its... major witness phase this week. What did we learn? What difference will it make? And the World Cup -- is the real story being glossed over?
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Are you ready for Good Talk?
And of course you're ready. That's what Fridays are for. Good Talk. Chantelle Hebert is in
Montreal. Bruce Anderson is in Ottawa. I'm Peter Mansbridge. I'm in Stratford, Ontario on this day.
Well, we've seen weeks now of the inquiry into the convoy, the convoy commission inquiry that's been going on in Ottawa.
We've heard witnesses from all sides culminating on this Friday with the prime minister talking.
Now, here's my opening question.
Chantelle, why don't you handle it?
Because the thing about Chantelle that we all know is that she is a person of the people.
She's a journalist of the people.
She loves to talk to just people,
whether that's in the grocery store or on the metro
or wherever it may be.
That's sometimes how she gets a sense of how the public is feeling about
issues or not feeling about issues.
So here's my question.
In your soundings around the Montreal area over these past weeks or months,
have there been a lot of people say,
Mzee Bear, tell us, what is really happening at that inquiry?
Or was Justin Trudeau going to get out of this one, which is the kind of question they used to ask about Paul Martin during the Comory Commission on inquiry on the sponsorship issue.
Seriously, buses, trains, teachers, cross guard people, and I don't go to them and ask,
so what do you think? They usually come to me. Not a single person over the past two months
has raised this commission of inquiry or even wanted to have a chat about whether the Emergencies Act was appropriate. There's nothing scientific about it,
but usually you know when an issue is becoming
hot. The parliamentary crisis
in 2008, so it's not just the obvious
issues. I was harangued by the person who was selling me vegetables
every Saturday over the fact that Stephen Harper didn't believe that Stéphane Zéon should become the prime minister and that people who backed that scenario me a separatist he's saying nothing like that nothing that even comes close
nothing um pierre poitier's leadership campaign fish store market um wouldn't josh i'd be great
to beat uh justin trudeau or what about this point i've got radio silence on the Hulot Commission. I hope that the judge does not take it too personally.
He is not achieving rock star status in the sense that Justice John
Gomery outside of Ottawa became, at least in this province.
What does that tell you, though?
It tells me that this commission is important for the process and for policy going forward.
And I have heard things this week
that make it, to me, even more important
than what I had assumed
because it lays the foundation
for the future use of a law
that is really an all-powerful piece of legislation.
And I think Bruce can confirm that based on his numbers, which are real and scientific.
I think the public came to a decision as to whether it was appropriate to do what the
federal government did back last winter, and that he she all have not heard anything that is
made them inclined to revisit their opinion that the federal government was probably right to do
this all right well let's ask bruce what uh what is your sense of the public's interest in this story and in this inquiry?
Well, you know, when I first started doing television interviews and panels and that sort of thing on politics,
goes back a number of years, even before I started doing the ad issue panel with you,
I used to worry a little bit that I was going to be the world's worst panelist.
And maybe I am. Some people probably think I am. But the reason I used to worry about that is that all of the years of
polling that I had done before I started doing those interviews taught me that not everything
that's important becomes a subject of public attention and not everything that is a matter
of great public attention is important
and a lot of interviewers didn't want to hear that they just wanted to hear i want to know
how transfixed and uh and uh how people are reacting to whatever it is that i need to ask
you about and i would be like well nobody's paying any attention to that i think evan
solomon in particular used to find that really unhelpful.
And our relationship survived that happily. But I agree with Chantal that this is important, this process.
And I think it's being conducted in a reasonable way.
There's obviously always going to be situations where we can look at it and say it could be improved.
But an important process.
I don't think it's attracting a lot of public attention.
I think political enthusiasts, sometimes I say nerds or junkies, and I don't like either of those words, really.
But let's call ourselves political enthusiasts.
We're paying a lot of attention because this subject matter is of interest to us. I think for the public, though, people pay attention to things that are either uniquely salacious or hugely important and relate to their lives in some kind of dramatic way where they can feel like if this goes badly, it will affect me badly.
And if it goes well, I'll be better off.
And this doesn't really meet that test for most people. And that's probably a good thing because it means that we
live in a country where the use and the apparent need to use measures like this really doesn't
happen very often. I think for most people, last thing I would say is that the journalism is doing
what it should do in this situation, which is sort of trying to draw a bead on the
technical or legal question at the heart of did the government have the necessary argument that
passes the test established by the words in their law to use this? I don't think that's the test
that the public uses. I think the test that the public uses is, was this an act of tyranny? Was it an act that was
embraced by the government without thinking through the consequences because they just
loved the idea of it? Is this a precedent that we should look at and say, it's going to happen
all the time now because the government was able to do it and get away with it. And the hearing process didn't derail that.
And I think the answer that most people come to on those questions is no, that the government
didn't really want to use it and that the process of the inquiry, it's a forensic examination
that no government will really want to go through in the future, even if they come
out of it the other end without any political scarring. All right. Just a couple of things on
this. One of the reasons I believe that it is also not generating the kind of public attention
or public reaction that some other issues are, is that there has been no,
the House of Commons has not acted as a communicating vessel for what happens at
the commission. Remember Gomery, something would be said on the stand in the morning,
it would be the bread and butter of question period in the afternoon with the government
forever under attack. In this case, it is as if the opposition parties live on a planet
very distant from the across-the-street inquiry,
and that starts with the official opposition.
No testimony has resonated in the political arena.
There are good reasons for that.
The NDP not only did support this move, but has also
stated via its leader that regardless of the conclusion, they will not withdraw their support
to the government on the basis of this report. I think the Bloc Québécois understands that there is
majority support. Some of Bruce's own numbers from back at the end of October show that Quebec is the province where
there is the most support for having
used the Act, considering the
history of 1970 and the
War Measures Act, that is
quite something. And I think the Conservatives
know that A, they're
divided on it, and B,
they can only lose points
over it.
But the absence of that resonance and partisan way in the House of Commons also leads to people looking at the news reports and saying,
oh, okay, let's move on.
You're not going to get people really, really excited over the fact that the Minister of Justice has invoked fine solicitor privilege
to not give some of the legal advice that he and
the government received. Although that is interesting, and it's a big piece in the puzzle
that Justice Hulot is handling. No one is going to be demonstrating over this tomorrow in any
Canadian city. Can I just add, I love Chantal's point about the lack of a kind of a resonant echo chamber continued to feel that and felt even more empowered in that position as a
result of the testimony, the convoy lawyer and participants would be having dinner at
Stornoway this week.
The Mr. and Mrs. Polyev would be making a show of the fact that they were with the patriots who challenged the tyranny, who
stood down the face of tyranny in Justin Trudeau. There's nothing even close to that happening.
This whole space has been vacated like there's some sort of biohazard by conservatives around it.
And that has to tell us something about whether they think they're on the right,
they have been on the right side of this
or whether they simply don't want to be drawn
into further association
with the manifestation of the convoy.
So I do think that's important.
And I think that the other thing Chantel touched on
is the provision
of legal advice to the government and this question sort of felt like some stakeholders
were saying this is an aha moment that we're not getting to see the legal advice that the
government got from the justice department or through the justice department i guess in some
instances might be the case uh i don't know. You know, I think that Chantal's right that people
aren't going to be transfixed by that or be particularly perturbed by the sense that not
seeing that advice doesn't give them the transparency that they're looking for.
I come at it more from the standpoint of any of us who've looked at legal advice in situations of any sort of similar nature can
understand that the advice is going to be ambivalent. It's going to say, if this, then that,
or if you look at this this way, if you turn it on its side, you might come to this conclusion.
And I can understand why, for any number of reasons, government isn't kind of feeling like they want to share all of that so that people don't then sort of bend it out of proportion.
I certainly feel as though the government's willing, from what it from law enforcement, from the RCMP police commissioner, from CSIS, from the Justice Department, in the end, it's a political decision to do it.
I took the political decision to do it, and I'm being held responsible for it, and I'm okay with that.
And I think most people will agree.
That's an okay thing to do.
Let me try to focus this down a little bit here.
First of all, Chantal had mentioned how Quebec had this overwhelming support
for the actions that the federal government took.
It's worth noting, because that was from your data, Bruce,
that in every province there was a majority support,
more support than against in terms of the government, which is interesting, including in the West.
Now, to focus down on one part here, and I hate doing this, and I know you hate me when I do ask it this way.
It's a strong word.
I don't think so.
I don't think I can hate you, but I'm bracing for it, whatever it is.
Well, here's the question.
Throughout this inquiry, through the weeks of testimony from all sides,
if there was one question that you were looking to hear answered, what was it?
And did you get an answer for it?
So it's sort of the one area that you were most interested
and you hadn't formed in your own mind what the answer was already
and you wanted to hear it from someone.
What was that question and did you hear an answer?
Chantal?
I don't think I approached it like that.
And I think the questions that I still have are questions that Justice Hulot will answer.
And I do have one that I had not been thinking about until this week.
But watching the government's arguments this week, because this was what the week was about.
But also the Deputy Minister of Finance, Michael Savio, last week,
I kind of understood that the government is trying to convince Justice Rouleau that the definition of a threat to national security should be broadened
to include economic interests.
And I have a quote here from Chrystia Freeland,
which I think spells it out quite clearly. She said,
a very serious threat to Canada's economic security can constitute a threat to national
security. Such a threat would need to be very great, and in this instance, it was.
That seems to me an invitation to open the door that for now in the law is closed.
And closed, there are two arguments on this.
Some will argue that's because when the law was crafted, circumstances were different.
And it is time to review the language to broaden the definition of a threat to national security.
But the other perspective, which I tend to share, is that there is a slippery slope there, that it is in the eye of the beholder how serious a threat to Canada's economy and national security, quote unquote, is constituted by, for instance, indigenous railroad blockades, an environmental protest that shuts down pipelines or a pipeline project.
And I am curious to see what, if anything, Justice Hulot will do about this,
because it opens doors that some of the very people who are opening it this week might believe or should stay shut.
I'm going to say this very bluntly.
Listening to Chrystia Freeland, I felt like asking her, would you be comfortable with
the broadening of a definition that would give Pierre Poilier more power and more capacity
to use this law?
Because I understand why the government is going there,
but it is a slippery slope.
And for people who have forgotten,
one, this law is a nuclear weapon in the government's toolbox.
Two, the notion that the public,
and I'm not optimistic like Bruce,
that this will not open the door to this being used again.
I tend to be of the other persuasion. And why I say that? In 1970, civil liberties were clearly breached to the face of the world. People were jailed for no reason. This time, public opinion,
as we've noted, is massively behind the government. I don't believe it will shift
against the government, no matter what the conclusions of the exercise. What is the message there? That it doesn't really matter that you're
not living up to the terms of the law, because the public will back you. And at the end of the day,
that is what the government seeks. So imagine that we have a railed law case, and it's used
for that reason in the broad and in the circumstances that christia
freeland articulated not just her but others do you seriously believe a majority of canadians
are going to say that's wrong rather than say about time to do something about this
i'm just asking and i i will see that answer i believe only when I see the report. All right.
Bruce, your one question and whether or not it was answered.
Well, I am going to want to talk a little bit about what Chantal just said,
which I agreed with roughly 90% this week on that point. I think the question that I wanted to see the answer to,
it wasn't really something I was terribly perplexed with,
but it was sort of in the focus of the public debate was what to make of the
situation where the public safety minister had said on advice from police,
I think is what he said.
This is, you know, that precipitated our decision.
And a lot of critics and observers have said, well, he didn't exactly get that advice from the police.
And so was he lying when he said that? Was he trying to misrepresent the kind of advice
that he was getting? I think it's possible that the specific construct of that sentence
wasn't everything that he would do if he were saying it again. But I also think that over the
course of the evidence provided, it was pretty clear that the cumulative effect of hearing what different police forces or people were saying and what the CSIS director was saying certainly would lead you to the conclusion that the police were saying, we don't have the tools or the plans or the wherewithal to get this done. And the CSIS director said things that might have sounded like,
I'm not sure what the legal definition means, in part because it hasn't been tested and whether
or not it stands up to the use of the act in this case, but I think you should use the act. So
I think there was an answer to that question. And I don't feel that the effort by that minister was to mislead people,cies Act and didn't have all of the attenuated trappings associated with the definition of national security crisis,
but something called a very serious problem for which the existing tools don't work act, then that would be the act that people would want to have in politics to use in this
situation. But we don't have that. We have something called the Emergencies Act that was
written with language intended to define something as being pretty darn serious and for which there
is no other alternative course of action. And so we're having a good debate about it. And the part that I was really
intrigued by that Chantal brought up is I was there, you know, 50 years ago when rights were
abrogated. I saw tanks and armored military vehicles come into the kind of the outskirts of the town of Valleyfield, where I was living at the time. And I believe that it's a slope, but I don't know that I believe that
it's that slippery. And maybe that's just my natural optimism. Maybe it's me saying, well,
if it was 50 years ago and it hasn't happened again since then. Maybe that's the reason for optimism.
But I'm also aware of the fact that we don't have the guardrails in society
that we used to.
The fact that we were talking at the beginning of this conversation about
people aren't really transfixed by this is part of that.
What we watched with Donald Trump is part of the realization or should be that what
we thought were barriers to governments doing really unexpected and inappropriate things,
those barriers, they're not as strong as they used to be. So maybe it can be a slippery slope
going forward, in which case all the more reason why we should be happy that we have this kind of forensic process as as imperfect as it may be it's still pretty good
okay i gotta take a break but chantelle did you want to say something in there
no i think it covers pretty much where i am about the slippery slope, it's not hard to see it, but you've got, and I'm sorry for people who watch this, I have a nosebleed, which is why I'm doing this.
You have a conservative party that, when we did have those indigenous rail blockades, wanted to send the police to clear them and pushed on the government to do that. You have a government that is arguing in front of a commission that one of the criteria for
using this act and being able to command serious police powers, extraordinary ones, is the
economic interest of Canada, which can be something that you define depending on situations.
And if you put the two together, you kind of can see a bit of a slippery slope
with no public opinion really standing firm in the way.
All right.
We're going to take a quick break,
and maybe Chantal will be able to stem the flow there
from her for bleeding nose.
And I've got another question on the convoy, and it's about strategy and the strategy used
by one of the participants.
But we're going to take a quick break.
When we come back, we'll deal with that.
And welcome back.
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All right, getting back to the convoy questions.
And here's my question here.
Because every possible side, I think, in this issue of what happened earlier this year in Ottawa and Cootes, Alberta, and the Ambassador Bridge in Windsor and elsewhere,
because every possible side had the opportunity to submit testimony,
to challenge some of the witnesses.
There were decisions made by these different entities.
One of them was the protesters,
and you've got to assume that the protesters were given an incredible opportunity to make their case before the commission and seemed somewhat, I don't know, he seemed somewhat unhinged.
He even chased somebody down the hallway yesterday, claiming they were the person who had been carrying the Nazi flag and he wanted them on the, you know, in the witness chair.
As it turned out, this person had nothing to do with that.
It's not the first time this week he's made charges about various people.
And as a result, he's facing a libel notice, I believe, on that.
But his performance seems at times, seemed to me at times,
to be a wasted opportunity that the protesters had.
They had the chair, they had the spotlight, they had the camera.
They could have made or tried to make a convincing argument
with some of the witnesses and challenging.
Was that an opportunity lost?
Or am I overstating what I was witnessing?
Bruce, you start.
You know, I think that the observation I have of the different lawyers and how they've been participating is it's been a bit of a mixed bag. I think there are some participants who are asking questions
that I think are, you know, pertinent and interesting and kind of explore questions
that will have a lingering value in terms of how we learn about the use of this act and the choices
that were made in it. And then there are others who are doing rather kind of performative or defensive things. They're trying to establish a political argument or to make a point about whether they
were as culpable for whatever was going on, that it was going badly, that sort of thing.
In the case of the convoy, you know, it's almost surprising that there is a lawyer representing the convoy.
I mean, there should be somebody representing the interests of the people whose rights were
imperiled. But I don't know if most of that energy should really reside with the convoy people the convoy um as we've heard
had multiple leaders multiple agendas um uh not everybody was there with a view to insurrection
and not everybody was there with a potential for violence um but you know i don't know when i'm listening to the convoy lawyer, whether I'm listening
to somebody who's trying to represent people who, um, whether he was just trying to represent
people who were coming with a legitimate kind of sense of, uh, of frustration with COVID
or whether he was coming, representing people who didn't understand that the vaccine mandate that affected truckers going into the United States was a U.S. law, not a Canadian situation, or whether I'm trying to kind of follow the, you know,
the Perry Mason-esque kind of approach of the convoy lawyer, I'm left a little bit confounded,
to be honest, I don't think it's very well thought through or structured. And I find that
the tone is more indicative of somebody who's, who's in a protest rather than in a tribunal hearing.
And so it's a little bit annoying for me to watch,
but I'm glad that we live in a country where it happens.
Raymond Burr would be upset with your Perry Mason analogy on that.
But that's okay.
It's a very dated analogy, and probably most of the people that we hope will be listening down the road anyway will have no idea what I'm talking about.
Otherwise, you're condemning yourself for a very short term future.
Why do these shows come back, though? Let's be honest. They're remakes.
Yeah, well, I hope they're remade because I don't think the original installments would have survived the test of time very well.
And that dates me too, since I can remember those shows.
First, I think Justice Rouleau was right to give the convoy the representation that it sought. I think the best way to do away with conspiracy theories about people being under
a tent conspiring against you is to be invited in the tent and then being told, well, do your best,
or in this case, do your worst. I think it's also obvious that the representation or the lawyer in question does not have a very deep knowledge of governance and governments.
And that has been obvious in some of the questioning.
But I think that certainly when you talk about lost opportunities,
I think one of the things that the style of representation has accomplished has been a gift to the government
and to the opposite side, because it has provided a
quasi-daily illustration of why
even if there had been negotiations between
the government and the convoy organizers to try to end this,
it would almost certainly have ended in failure,
that there was not common ground based on facts or reality.
And when I say this, I talk about, for instance,
the faction that believed that the governor general and others could get together
to overturn the government and try Justin Trudeau for treason.
Well, to have a discussion or a negotiation, you need to start from the same reality.
And what we have seen is that that was not the case on just about anything that came up over the past two months,
including the fact that if you'd been walking in that place yesterday,
Peter, you might have been asked by that lawyer whether you wanted to testify
because you have some of the physical attributes of the person that he thinks he's looking for.
But that tells you a lot about where all this is going,
when the lawyer will run after anyone who has a mustache uh and is of that
age to say do you want to testify i can arrange it oh there might be an age gap there i don't know
about that but i want to go back to the but the way the way this this scene unfolded it kind of
uh says so yes it was a lost opportunity but not for the commission, for the convoy people.
Exactly.
Just before we leave it, there was actually a remake of the Perry Mason show.
There was, and it wasn't very good, I don't think.
It wasn't very good.
Even though it had some good actors in it, it wasn't very good.
Can I just add something?
I know you want to, we're going to move on in a minute.
But I did think, and what Chal was saying made me think about this i was watching
the testimony by three people from the prime minister's office uh yesterday uh katie telfer
the prime minister's chief of staff john broadhead the policy director and um brian cl, who's also a very senior person in the office.
And, you know, it was a reminder that, you know,
these are obviously people who work in political jobs
and there are lots of critics of political staffers,
but these are very professional people.
And we've seen Kate Telford in, in a situation where she's being
questioned as part of a hearing before, I think it was the, the we scandal, I hate to call it the
we scandal, because I don't actually think it was a scandal. But I know that you're going to get a
lot of letters, Peter, and you're gonna ask me, why do I provoke people that way? But anyway,
the we conversation, and I remember thinking when she did testify in that context, she was very effective.
She's very well prepared. She's very well spoken. She doesn't get rattled.
And yesterday with the convoy lawyer, I was kind of reminded of, you know, just how professional that response by the PMO was.
Now, it remains to be seen what the prime minister does today.
But, well, folks can look at this text and that text and say, well, they were being political.
And, you know, the truth is they're there because they have a political antenna.
They're there to help ministers and the prime minister kind of accomplish their agenda,
but they're essentially going to be political analysts to some degree.
And it shouldn't be forgotten in the mix that during the convoy,
the amount of pressure on the government to stop and end the convoy was like this. And the amount of pressure not to
was really low. And now, of course, the situation is sort of, it's not reversed in the sense that,
but all of the focus is on should they have done that? Whereas back, and I think Minister Freeland
was referring to some of this as well. In the moment, it wasn't that the government was just
sitting there and the public was kind of ambivalent about it. There were a lot of people who were
more directly affected, perhaps than in other parts of the country, in Ottawa and on some of
the border crossings, but they wanted action. There were a lot of economic players that wanted
action. And that pressure was felt. And it wasn't, therefore, just a political calculation of how many votes will
we get if we invoke the Emergencies Act. It was, what do people expect us to do? How bad,
how significant, how mounting is that pressure? And so I was interested in that exchange,
but I didn't think that the convoy lawyer handled it in a very enlightening way.
Let me just, okay, go ahead, Chantal.
Because I suspect you may be about to change topics.
I am. I have one more question.
Okay, but I want to just mention two things that are unrelated
to the convoy lawyer or the PMO staffers, but it's
more to the exerciseoy lawyer or the PMO staffers, but it's more to the exercise in general.
I have to say that this inquiry
has convinced me of two things.
One, it would be useful to have the same kind of exercise
regarding the management of the pandemic,
not to put a government on trial,
but to give all the players a chance
to explain their perspective
and figure out what we learned from the experience
rather than have a government leave
and one day something like this will visit us again
and whatever they will have left in those boxes
will all that will be left.
I think the Canadian public would benefit
from having a discussion outside the partisan frame of a
parliamentary committee about the pandemic in general, the decisions that were taken,
what went well, what went wrong. The other thing is, and I suspect Justice Llewellyn and his crew
will dislike this intensely, I believe we should, going forward, always have public inquiries work under an imposed, hard
and fast, not extendable deadline so that they get on with the job and then do not get
to, and you've seen some of those inquiries that were so extended that they ended up being
closed down so that they can't forever go to the government
and get so many extensions, which sometimes pleases the government of today,
that they become irrelevant. And yeah, I understand that the holiday season is not
going to be great for Justice Hulot and for the people who work for the inquiry,
because they have to report by mid-February. But I think that is the way that
you keep the issue fresh, topical, and relevant. And so far, he's been running a tight ship.
He's moved those along. There haven't been any delays of any consequence that I've witnessed,
which is pretty impressive. On your point, it's funny because I remember in the first week,
I think it was Bruce first made the point about how remarkable this was because we were actually seeing documentation and we were seeing notes.
We were seeing stuff that usually takes 20 years before we see it coming out of, you know, in some cases, cabinet discussions and clearly senior meetings of different sorts.
But I remember asking at the time, do you think it will be used elsewhere?
And I think the response that I got from both of you,
including you, Chantal, was that, no, this isn't going to happen anywhere else.
Because, you know, I agree with you.
It would be nice to see a rational look at COVID
and how the whole thing played out.
But have you changed your mind at all about the possibility that something like that could happen?
Not necessarily, just because I think like you, that it would be good.
And I thought, for instance, that this week the government put on a decent show. Overall, they came across more as a reassuring presence
than as a disjointed set of players,
despite the discomfort at having some of their internal texts brought forward.
And yes, when you write them,
you don't expect to have them shown to you and to the public.
But I think that
discomfort means that by and large the the there will not be a lot of political will for having
these kinds of exercises on other fronts such as the pandemic no that's right but i also think that
the you know what's interesting about the text is, you know, it's kind of human nature to be interested in other people's private communication.
But if we step back from from that, and I'm not pieces of communication was going to show that you were right in saying that this government is made up of tyrants who couldn't wait to use this tool to crush resistance.
I don't think there was any collection of clips or quotes or text messages
that sort of laddered up to that. That doesn't mean that they all look good under this kind of
sunshine, but it doesn't feel like the tyranny was exposed by the revelations that we saw in those
exchanges. Of course, some of them were blocked out, right?
Yes, there you go.
Parts of them were blocked out.
Let's get that conspiracy theory.
They did that because they have the Bill Gates chip inside them,
the people who were doing the redactions.
And the chip told them that they needed to redact.
One day he's going to end up on social media with just that sentence,
and he will regret ever saying it.
That's right.
There you go, Bruce.
We'll mark that down.
41 minutes, 10 seconds into this conversation, Bruce.
All right, let's stop the tape and go back and let's redo it.
I'll just tell you one quick story before we move on.
And I know that some of you like to hear these stories,
but it's a CBC story.
And things can get pretty paranoid inside the CBC at times.
I don't know what it's like there now.
I've been gone six years.
I can't account for anything there now.
But I can remember having been a person in a senior position
at one particular crazy point in terms of the the cbc story and the way people were
investigating this that and the other thing about the cbc um i remember being uh being in the office
of one of my fellow senior players who looked at me and said jesus vansbridge don't write anything
down you want to say something come in here and talk to me about it don't write it down
that was because of course everything is out there and can be called upon to be produced
anyway it wasn't it wasn't anything nefarious it was pretty simple actually but nevertheless
if i can add my dad was a supervisor in toronto when i started in this business and one of the few pieces of
advice he ever gave me was don't write anything down and there was no social media the year is
1976 but and i have kept that advice he said if you have something nasty that you feel you must
say don't write it say it a little hard feel you must say, don't write it.
Say it.
It's a little hard, though, to tell a journalist don't write anything down.
Yeah, well, but these things never go away, right?
So I write emails sometimes to respond to people.
And then I look at them and I say, do you really need to do this?
And I trash them.
I don't send them.
Right. Well,'t send them. Right.
Well, that's why.
I've noticed that your emails are usually quite short.
I know that that don't seem to be suddenly appearing in terms of various commissions.
Now, I'm not suggesting that any of those ministers or players or prime ministers
or anybody would use anything like that, but who knows?
Okay, we're almost out of time for the day.
This has been a fascinating conversation.
Let's put it at that.
And take our final break and come right back.
Here we go. And we're back for our final segment on Good Talk for this Friday's edition of The Bridge.
You're listening on Sirius XM, Channel 167, Canada Talks, or on your favorite podcast platform or you're watching on our YouTube channel.
Okay.
I could go in either direction, but given the fact we only got about five minutes left,
I'm going to go in this direction.
The world is watching the World Cup.
You know, it is the beautiful game.
It is what people in every corner of the world, in every different kind of country,
and every different level of class are watching, if they're able,
the World Cup. They're watching soccer. But this year it's coming. The World Cup is coming from
Qatar or Qatar, depending on how you want to pronounce it. And that in itself has caused a
degree of controversy. Some countries are using their opportunity in Doha
or one of the other communities in Qatar that is hosting the Games
to use their moment on television to show their dissatisfaction
with any number of different things,
including the kind of government that exists in Qatar.
Canada has been, for the most part, silent about this, and so has its players.
I'm not sure whether you depend on players to carry the flag on something like this if
you're going to protest, but the government hasn't said anything.
And I'm wondering whether either of you have strong feelings one way or the other
about what Canada's shooter could be doing in this triumphant moment for Canada
in terms of actually getting back to the World Cup
and playing extremely well in their first game the other day against Belgium.
But beyond that, Bruce, you got anything to say on this?
Yeah, in my mind, I'm trying really hard to separate
the role of the game and the players
from the politics of FIFA and Qatar.
And to respect the fact that this event only comes along every once in a while
and that it is a showcase of a sport and the talents of these players that many, many, many
people around the world look forward to and want to enjoy and that they should be able to enjoy it without the surrounding politics
isn't a question of whether they lack the moral fiber to protest what's going on in Qatar.
It's a function of the fact that the leadership of FIFA, the organizing entity, is horrible.
The speech that the president of FIFA made the other day was one of the most shockingly inept and objectionable speeches that I could ever imagine.
A leader of an organization that puts on an event of this scale could do deliberately.
Like if he had been drunk at a dinner table somewhere and said these things, you might go, people say really ridiculous things when they're drunk.
But he said this at a press conference. I have very strong feelings today. I feel Qatari. I feel Arab. I feel African. I feel gay. I feel disabled. I feel like a migrant worker. He talked about being at school bullied because he had red hair and freckles and because he was Italian and didn't speak good German.
It defies belief that an organization with this much money and time and effort to put into planning this kind of event could have done such a horrific job of it.
And that's even before you get to they signed on Budweiser among many sponsors, a major beer producer that has shipped over all kinds of beer, put up tents.
And then a couple of days before it was announced that there wasn't going to be any beer sales at this event.
It's so shockingly poorly thought through and organized. inconsiderate about even the most basic decisions about how to run it and more than inconsiderate
when it comes to the human rights and other social issues that are raised.
Two minutes, Chantal.
So I agree with Bruce on FIFA.
Obviously, couldn't care less about human rights, be it that of the workers who were used
literally as slaves to put this together, or LGBTQ communities across the world. We're now
seeing a country try to use the World Cup as a showcase for itself. The good news is that didn't
work. It backfired badly. If you didn't know anything about Qatar two weeks ago, what you know
now is not something that
is positive for that country.
It's the opposite. As for the Canadian
government, I note that
there was a
unanimous motion passed in the House of Commons
this week, so the Liberals
voted for it, basically,
to denounce the approach to LGBTQ
rights and to people who want to
express support as part of attending the games in person.
I'm not sure I understand why we sent the minister there.
It looks like an odd call and I do not believe that Minister Sajan really advanced the cause of human rights as he says he did by having discussions with Cathay Reu authorities,
the same authorities that basically issue fiats over the selling of beer overnight,
were not waiting for a Canadian minister to come and show them the error of their ways on human rights. You know, I have some sympathy for the way, well, both you said,
but from what Bruce said at the beginning,
it's hard to separate the sport from the controversy.
I mean, the controversy is happening because of the sport, right?
But at the same time, you know, Canadians want to rally behind these,
these players who are representing this country for the first time and only
the second time in the way in the world.
One of the other egregious things, Peter, I know you, you,
you'd probably kind of have a particular reaction to see a very strong sports
fan, including you like the lease, which is a mystery, but the,
you have 30 seconds to make this point.
FIFA would cross what for me was another line among the many,
not the most egregious, but still very strange that they would say to a player, if you wear a particular symbol that we are going to penalize you in the context of the
game um i just find that just so shocking uh in a day and age where these events depend on the
support of hugely um global corporations who they have to know cannot go along with that or can't ever put themselves
in that situation again at least. It's really shocking the things that FIFA has allowed itself
to be drawn into doing on behalf of its Qatari hosts. All right, gonna have to wrap it up at
that point. Great conversation today. I appreciate your patience. We didn't get to all the topics we wanted to get
to, but I think we gave
what we did have to talk
about. Chantal and I are going to stay on the line
and talk about the other ones after you. Sure.
Well, you go ahead and do that. Actually,
Chantal wanted to run
out on some of the other ones.
Well, we will
get to them at some point.
Thank you both, Chantal, Bruce. I'm Peter Mansbridge. Have a great weekend. We'll talk to them at some point. Thank you both, Chantel, Bruce.
I'm Peter Mansbridge.
Have a great weekend.
We'll talk to you again in 24 hours.
Or no, we'll talk to you again on Monday is when we'll talk to you.