The Paul Wells Show - Encore: Bob Rae knows people
Episode Date: June 4, 2025As Canada’s Ambassador to the UN, Bob Rae is not afraid to speak his mind, even when it’s not clear whether the government stands behind him. In this episode, he talks about the role of the UN in ...an age of mounting skepticism towards global institutions, his reputation for being outspoken, and dealing with the "cascade of crises" taking place around the world. He also challenges Paul on a column he wrote in 2020, questioning Rae’s appointment to his current job. This episode originally aired on October 26, 2022.
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Here's another one of my favorite episodes from the archives.
It's a sometimes heated, but informative interview with a unique figure in Canadian politics.
We recorded this in the fall of 2022, but Bob Ray is still Canada's ambassador to the United Nations.
And everything we talked about then is still relevant today,
from the population's growing skepticism of institutions
to what it's like governing in a time of cascading crises.
Enjoy this conversation with Bob Ray.
So this was awkward.
I think there's an advantage to coming into a job where people have very low expectations.
I think I seem to remember reading a column by you where you, you had low expectations.
I was the only journalist in Canada who had, who had a Canada who had an unkind word to say about the appointment.
You certainly did.
And I remember reading it very well and I cast it aside
gently and said, well, we'll see.
We'll see how that goes.
So, since you mentioned it,
my concerns were that you were not a career diplomat and that you're gonna
be surrounded by all these people who knew their gang and who knew one another and you were coming
in reasonably late in your career green on both of those fronts. You didn't know Fort Pearson,
you didn't know the foreign ministry at home. I think that's ridiculous.
And you didn't know this culture. I think that's ridiculous. I mean. You didn't know this, this, this culture.
I think that's absurd.
I think it shows you what you don't know, frankly, Paul.
That's Bob Ray, Canada's ambassador to the
United Nations, tearing a strip off of me.
When he got the job, I wrote a column
suggesting he shouldn't have.
Turns out he read it.
I'm Paul Wells.
Welcome to the Paul Wells Show.
This week, Bob Ray and the Cascade of Crises.
["The Cascade of Crises"]
So about that column, when Bob Ray was appointed Canada's ambassador to the UN in 2020, Canada had
just run for a seat on the UN security council and
lost like three weeks earlier for the second time
in a decade.
Meanwhile, Donald Trump was the president of the
United States, Britain was Brexit and COVID had
shut down global travel.
It might actually have been the worst possible time, and COVID had shut down global travel.
It might actually have been the worst possible time
to be getting into the multilateralism game.
Being a sensible sort, I wrote a column
saying Ray was the wrong person for the job.
All the other UN ambassadors from big G7 countries
were diplomatic lifers who'd been representing
their countries all their lives.
And they were all more than a decade younger than Ray.
He'd been doing important things, of course.
He was Ontario's only NDP premier for one thing.
And he was brought in as interim leader of the
federal liberals after the worst election
result in their history.
This one time he even saved the Toronto Symphony.
But none of that makes a guy a purpose built
tool for expressing Canadian foreign policy.
What I was implying was that it was getting awfully late for Ray to be starting a new career
in the world fixing business.
He doesn't agree, and I'll let you hear why.
The fact is Bob Ray's been getting noticed in New York,
where he's been so outspoken in confronting Russia
over the Ukraine invasion and other bullies
over just about everything, that it's sometimes not clear
he has the government of Canada behind
him when he talks.
What if he's right?
What if he is the right man for the job?
Of course, he's done just about everything,
including foreign affairs in a long career.
He was a Rhodes scholar.
He ran the forum of federations, which was a
pet project of Jean Chrétien and Stéphane
Dion, and an interesting one.
He carried out specialized diplomatic
missions for Justin Trudeau, which
was also about Ray and Trudeau figuring out whether they could work together.
And he's one of the country's great talkers.
He doesn't need a lot of prep time.
Just point him at a topic and say, go.
He makes news in our interview, I think.
Did you know Canada's ambassador to the UN thinks Ukraine should have been given
a roadmap to NATO membership 14 years ago?
Now you do.
All of this brings me around to thinking that maybe Bob Rae fits Canada's foreign policy
or Justin Trudeau's, the way all those diplomatic lifers fit the systems in Japan and France
and Great Britain.
Those countries have consistent foreign policies built on the pursuit of durable interests
in the face of stubborn threats. Canada, not so much.
Justin Trudeau's had five foreign ministers. He sent them five public mandate letters.
None of those letters even mentioned China. Maybe the best man to represent Canada in the world is
a guy who's really good at filling in the blanks. I give you Bob Ray.
Bob Ray.
Bob Ray, thanks for joining us.
Thank you so much for having me.
What are you working on today?
Today started with some meetings about Haiti, then I've got a group of American military
guys coming to see us this afternoon, meeting with a number of colleagues from other missions.
And then I've got a dinner tonight talking about
the state of the South Pacific Islands that are
dramatically impacted by climate change.
So it's a regular day, I would say.
I didn't pay much attention to what goes on at the
United Nations until Alan Rock became
the ambassador there, golly, close to 20 years ago.
And the impression I got as I followed his work there is that it's just astonishing detail
work.
There are obviously so many interests represented in such a formal way that everything becomes
channels.
Is that pretty close to the way it works? Sort of. The schedule is sort of like a 24-hour high school, because your day is in one hour,
half hour, two hour segments on a whole range of very, very different issues. So in order to get the most out of it, you sort of have to say, well, of all these issues,
what's the most important for this week and for the next week and for how we follow it
through?
And it is detail work.
It's swatting exams.
You're working hard.
And I've found it completely fascinating and very, very worthwhile.
I think much of what the public sees
is the dysfunction of the Security Council or some debate in the General Assembly that seems to go nowhere. I keep telling people that's only part of what this is all about. There's a whole
lot of other stuff that goes on all the time. So are you trying to tell me that place is still
useful? I don't think useful is
the word. I think it's necessary. If we didn't have an institution like this, we would need to
somehow recreate it. I mean, the reality is it's the one place in the world where people can come
together, where you can have conversations with people you completely disagree with,
where you're not only talking to like-minded, as we say, or people whose values you completely disagree with, where you're not only talking to like-minded, as we say,
or people whose values you completely share and utterly agree with, you're talking with
a whole range of people who have very, very different views than we do.
And it's a place where there's a culture that's been built up over many, many, many
decades, where you can have an off-the-record conversation with somebody
that isn't going to happen any other way.
You've got to have the physical closeness and the geography of it, and you've also got
to have the tradition of it where you just say, this is off the record, I'm having this
conversation.
You need to know where we're coming from on this and see what else we can do about getting
to a solution.
It seems to me that we as a society have kind of gotten out of the habit of
meeting and talking in those grey zones between stark positions and stark assertions of right and wrong and trying to find those areas of accommodation
or at least mutual understanding.
That feels kind of old fashioned somehow.
Well, I think it might be old fashioned,
but it's certainly very necessary.
You can't live your life without it.
Or maybe you can, maybe some people can.
But you're right, there's a lot of tendencies
in social media, tendencies in political,
domestic, certainly political conversations,
where it becomes harder and harder to the proverbial reach across the aisle or find a way to get
to a solution.
But of course, there's that life here too, right?
I mean, there's every nation state is working under the reality and the direction of their
own government.
There may be a need for a
minister or for a leader of a country to say I want these views clearly
expressed on the floor of the United Nations. I don't want there to be any
mealy-mouthed declarations. I want to be very clear for everybody
where we're coming from. But I think in my case certainly there's a lot of
understanding that some of the most valuable
work we can do is working to try and see where this is going and where this is headed and how
we can perhaps set it in a different direction. Okay. Now, the Prime Minister sent you there
in the middle of 2020. That's right.
My hunch is that there had been some conversations for some time before that about whether you were interested in a posting and what you might do.
But in the event, you land in the middle of some
of the worst months in New York's history of
devastating loss of life because of COVID, strong
lockdowns, not a really auspicious start to your work.
Well, I completed the work that I did on the
Rohingya, completed it.
I mean, I submitted my report and then I did a
couple of other follow-ups.
And then the PM said, we'd like you to do some
bit more work on what impact the refugee crisis
globally is going to have on, on events.
And that came before COVID.
So while COVID was happening, I was doing that. I got
a call from the prime minister right after the attack on the plane that was carrying
a lot of Iranians out of Iran to Ukraine. And he called me about advice on that because
I'd done some work on Air India. And he said, can you come over, come up to Ottawa?
I came to Ottawa, we had a nice chat about that and a chat about a bunch of other things.
Then he said, do you have any interest in going to New York as ambassador?
I said, I would have a lot of interest in doing that.
He said, well, Mark Andre is there,
but he's due to change over after in summer.
So if you're willing to go, it would be great
if you could do that.
So I accepted, as they say, with alacrity.
And then because of the other things that were happening
with the vote and so on on the Security Council,
I came to New York a couple of times and then COVID came.
And yeah, I started in COVID.
I started in a difficult time, His morale was low because we just lost
the Security Council vote.
And a lot of challenges that brought with it.
But it's been fascinating.
And I think that to those crises,
a number of others have been added,
most notably the Ukrainian crisis.
So it's kept me very engaged. And it's been a job where I feel like
I'm very much at home because in a way this is sort of where my young life started. My
dad was a diplomat as you know and I was very much influenced by him over the years. He
had this job. He was in New York in the 70s. So it's been a fascinating experience.
I think there's an advantage to coming into a job
where people have very low expectations.
I think, I seem to remember reading a column by you
where you had low expectations.
I was the only journalist in Canada
who had an unkind word to say about the appointment.
You certainly did, and I remember reading it very well and I cast it aside gently and said,
well, we'll see, we'll see how that goes.
So since you mention it, my concerns were that you were not a career
diplomat and that you're going to be surrounded by all these people who knew their gang and who knew
one another and you were coming in reasonably late in your career green on both of those fronts. You
didn't know Fort Pearson, you didn't know the foreign ministry at home.
I think that's ridiculous.
And you didn't know this culture.
I think that's absurd. I think it shows you what you don't know, frankly, Paul.
this culture. I think that's absurd.
I think it shows you what you don't know, frankly, Paul.
I mean, I grew up in this culture.
For 20 years, I worked creating an NGO called the Form of Federation.
So I worked very closely with people in what you call Fort Pearson, but in the Pearson
building in Ottawa.
I've known diplomacy my whole life.
I think anybody who knew me would know that. So the fact that I was a politician, and you may not have known of my other life interests, is frankly irrelevant.
In fact, political skills are quite helpful. They're not that different from diplomatic skills.
They're actually very, very helpful. The one thing I completely accept is that what I call the back to school is
you've got to be prepared to accept the discipline of the ins and outs and the ways to and how
to communicate and how to do this and that and the protocol of meetings and all of that.
A lot of it came very naturally to me. I didn't find it like putting on a very uncomfortable,
ill-fitting suit, quite the opposite. It seemed to fit quite well.
As for the age thing, which you mentioned, I think that can all be a matter of opinion.
I mean, there's a lot of ageism. I'm not embarrassed about my age.
Sometimes experience helps. Sometimes having had previous experiences helps. I found at the UN that
all of the stuff that I've done before has really been prologue to this mission and this job. And
I've found it very helpful. It's all been grist to the mill. I think my bluntness has been an
advantage because a number of diplomats say we really appreciate
how quickly you cut to the chase rather than just repeat the messages that we're getting
from capital. And I've tried to keep doing that. I think that's very helpful. My energy level is
good. My acuity seems to be not diminishing too much. So I'll leave it at that.
We're going to get to the matter of your bluntness,
which you yourself have remarked upon from time to time.
But first of all, some more context sending,
which is what you call the astounding cascade of crises
that has beset the world, was besetting the world
when you landed in the middle of the pandemic, doesn't seem to be getting better.
It is a hell of a mess out there.
First of all, how would you, how would you
describe the contours of this global
cascade of crises?
And secondly, how did we get into it and, and,
and what are the chances of getting out?
That's a short question.
Well, it is a hell of a mess.
I mean, I guess that's not a bad way to describe it.
I think it's important to disentangle the mess and try to figure out exactly what isn't.
I think the mess has many different elements to it.
The first one is the sort of where we are in time in history this incredible process of decolonization that has taken place in a post-imperial
era
after the Second World War
Therefore an incredible
Number of members of the UN who who were not there and were not there for much of the 20th century
Were not able to participate. I've suddenly come, you know come on the scene, in many cases still very
poor, significantly disadvantaged, and with a strong sense of resentment, I think would
be not too strong a word about what the hell has happened to them and how they got to be
in this position. So that culture of grievance, which is very, very powerful inside the organization, and you've got
billions of very poor people in the world, you've got a whole lot of challenges facing so many
countries, violence and conflict, but it's all seen through this particular lens. And I think it's hard for people who just look at it
from outside and say, what the hell's going on?
I said, this is partly what explains
the challenge that we face.
Then you've got this ongoing challenge of climate change,
which is, whose intensity is growing with every year,
and yet the solutions for it are extremely
complex, very, very difficult, and the politics of it are equally complex and difficult. Where
we're seeing it is the number of displaced people, the number of people who are impacted
by severe weather, longer droughts, food shortages in the mountains of the Himalayas, the glaciers are melting,
which has a direct impact on river flows. All of the great river systems in South Asia
are coming off the Himalayas. You just go down the list. It's huge. And it's going
to be even huger as it goes on. But the reality is it's a global crisis, and it requires global solutions.
And global solutions are very difficult because it means everybody has to do them.
Then we have the pandemic.
The immediate economic impact of COVID and the steps that governments took to deal with
it was unprecedented.
There's no rival for it. You could compare it to perhaps to
wars when governments spent money hand over and were fist, but it's not in peacetime.
There's absolutely no precedent for what countries decided to do collectively.
And unfortunately, not all countries were in a position to do it. So that exacerbated this sense
were in a position to do it. So that exacerbated this sense of division, which I've talked about. Then you have the access to the vaccine, which has also been unequal. So that again
increases the sense of division. And the realization that the old rubric that we're in the same
boat is not entirely true because the economic and social geographical
circumstances of every country are very very different and that has exacerbated
again the sense of alienation and frustration. Finally, Ukraine. I don't
think it was thought that Putin would go as far as he has gone, would be as
destructive as he has been and so unhinged. And that has created further
deep tragedy for Ukraine and for the people of Ukraine, created huge losses for Putin and his
army. But looking at the economic and social impacts around the world, significant increase
in number of refugees, but inflation now coming on us as a major
factor in our lives.
I've gone on quite a long answer to a long question, but I think we have to see it as
it's just a cascade of crises, not one.
If you said, well, if we had one problem to deal with, it would be bad enough, but we
have this whole succession of issues to deal with it would be it would be bad enough but we have this whole succession of issues to deal with. What is common to all of them is that they don't lend
themselves to simple or nationalistic or one country based solutions. They can
only come about through cooperation and the need to engage and the need to
commit ourselves to understanding that this is the world we're in. We're not in another kind of world.
This is the world we're in.
You're on the other end of a long line from Ottawa.
I wonder whether, given the tempo of these crises, whether the tempo of waiting to make
sure that you and the government agree sometimes gets in the way. Well, I mean, in every job that's true. I mean, I have been given a lot of leeway, I
would say, to exercise my judgment, but I'm under no illusions that I represent the government
and the decisions of the government are the decisions that I
defend and explain. That's my job as a public servant. I was under no illusions. I knew
that coming in. But as time went on, I'll tell you the first time that something happened
that made me realize that there was a way to do this in a way that might be quite creative
was when I was in the middle of one of the first debates that I was sitting in in the fall of
2020 and I read out a statement that had been approved by Ottawa that was, you know, all part
of the... and it referred to the two Michaels and referred to other incarcerations and situations that
were unfair.
And at the end of the session, I discovered that there's something called the right of
reply.
And so the government of Syria, the government of China, all decided to weigh in.
And of course, they weighed in principally against some other countries, but then they
made a point of coming after Canada.
And so I went out down to the desk of the person
who was sort of next to the,
the speak sort of the equivalent of like the people
next to the speaker in the House of Commons,
you know, the desk guys.
I said, can I reply to this reply?
And they said, sure, yeah, of course. So I said, well,
put me down. And I walked back to my seat. And I replied. I didn't have a note. I didn't
have a text. I just replied. Then they replied again. And I said, how long can I keep this
going? He said, you've got one more shot. So I gave it another shot. And I left the hall
and my staff said, that was interesting. I said, well, thank you. But a lot of delegates came up
and said, wow, that was great. Really appreciated your engaging, not backing off, defending your country and explaining the situation.
And I got back to the office and people were quite happy and said, that's fine.
You stayed within the lines of what our instructions were.
And then a day or two later, unbeknownst to me, someone tweeted out the exchange because the exchange is taped.
And so I said, well, if you're tweeting it out, I'll retweet it.
So I retweeted the exchange and then it went viral.
And then Ottawa said, that was great.
It took Ottawa a little while to say that was great.
It'll wait a couple of days just to see, get the assessment. But I have
to say that I don't find the relationship to be at all strained or challenging. I mean,
you just have to be disciplined. You have to think all the time, as I do when I speak
to you. My mind is always, and always was in scrum, I learned this long ago, is try to figure
out how to avoid saying something completely stupid and remember what the basic instructions
are and the direction you're going in.
And if you do that, then you're okay.
I mean, there is, of course, the famous story, I've told it many times, of Walter Riddell,
who was our representative in the league of nations, who was basically
denounced and disowned in the house of commons
by the minister saying, well, he was speaking for
himself, it wasn't speaking for us.
So, you know, that's what happens.
More recently in an interview with the CBC
radio program, the house, you were asked whether
Canada should send Ukraine any arms that they asked for and you
said, this may be a career limiting answer, but I don't see how you answered that question except
yes, absolutely, send them everything. I mean, you seem to have survived.
Totally.
That debate about whether to send lethal arms to Ukraine before the Russian invasion and to some extent since is a live debate of long standing. Did you always think that it was a good idea to
send weapons into a potential war zone? And how does your thinking evolve on that question?
Well, if you read stuff that I've written over the years and understand my sort of position in life,
years and understand my sort of position in life. I'm a very much a student of the politics of the years between the First World War and the Second World War. Ever since high school, I've been
fascinated by that time in history. And I am very much one of those people who believe that
very much one of those people who believe that the road to the worst wars is paved when you don't deal with the problem early on in the life of the situation.
I felt and felt for a long time and feel now that the people of Ukraine have a country.
They've had a country and an identity for a very long time.
They were nearly wiped out by Stalin in the 1930s.
Their country was the bloodlands of the war between the Germans and the Russians in the
Second World War.
They lived under Soviet tyranny for a long time, got worse in the 50s, 60s, 70s.
Finally they became their own country. Again, that
identity reestablished. So, I felt very strongly about Eastern Europe. My wife and I went to
the first democratic election in Lithuania in 1990. And I think that freedom is incredibly important. And I don't believe that you deal
with tyranny in any other way than being prepared to defend yourself. I've been a supporter
of NATO. I was a supporter of NATO when I was a member of the New Democratic Party,
and it wasn't popular, but I was. And I've never had a different thought. I don't think you
rattle sabres for no reason. I don't think aggression is ever a good idea, but you have
to be able to defend yourself against aggression and I think that's what the Ukrainians have been
doing from the outset. Let's test that a little further.
Ukraine was looking for a roadmap to NATO accession in 2008. Vladimir Putin was already warning against it in his 2007 speech to the Munich Security Conference. Stephen Harper has,
and I'm not waving his name around as a partisan flag, but he was the prime minister. He has said
that Ukraine should have gotten that roadmap to accession in 2008, but he was the prime minister and he has said that Ukraine should have
gotten that roadmap to accession in 2008, that Putin was going to stomp his feet,
but it was right then and it might have helped. Do you buy that?
Yes.
Oh. What do you think would have happened? How would that have played out?
Well, I think, I do not believe that Mr. Putin's so-called red lines should be taken as just
as saying, well, that's his red line.
We can't do anything more about it.
I think the real issue between Putin and Ukraine and why he thinks it's different is he is
insistent that Ukraine is not a separate country.
Ukraine is not a separate place. Ukraine is not a separate place.
It does not have its own identity.
He says, yeah, the Baltic countries,
yeah, sort of, yes, okay.
Poland, yeah, whatever.
Hungary, yeah, okay, but not Ukraine.
Ukraine is different.
And I think we understand now in what sense it's different.
He thinks it's his.
And he thinks he can do whatever he wants.
He thinks he can kill, brutalize, terrorize,
threaten people with any kind, torture people.
When the full record is taken
of what this man has done in Ukraine,
I think he'll be among one of the greatest war criminals
in history.
I think what he's done is beyond disgusting.
And I think the answer to that is not to say,
well, well, he's got his red lines, we'd better respect them. He doesn't respect anybody else's red lines
he doesn't respect international law's red lines he doesn't respect you mean
well you can do this but you can't do that. No and you can't let tyrants like
this decide what the future is going to look like. It's a ridiculous
position to put ourselves in. Frankly, I think my position
is very much embraced by many leaders in NATO, and I think it's widely felt in public opinion.
I think public opinion in Europe and in North America has been helping to encourage governments
to do what should be done.
I wonder whether you ever met Putin?
I did once. I mean, it wasn't a one-on-one meeting in an alley or anything.
It was at a gathering in Moscow.
I was part of a delegation that was led by Governor General Clarkson
when I was chairman of the Forum of Federations.
We were there to look
at Arctic issues, spent some time in the Arctic. And so I was present at a meeting that was
attended by many, many people talking about Russia and Canada. Those were early days. That was around 2003 or 2004, I think was the time of that visit.
He had an iciness about him that struck me at the time.
I said to somebody in that delegation, I said, you can take the boy out of the KGB, but you
can't take the KGB out of the boy.
I think that's true.
Some people think the thing to do is to get Russia out of the permanent circle of members of the Security Council and take its veto away because the United Nations
is often hobbled by the presence of Russia and Chinese vetoes.
Well, the vetoes are a product of the UN's history out of the deal that
Roosevelt and Stalin and Churchill, much less China and France, but those three made in Yalta
and elsewhere. My own instinct is to say if we had to start it all over again, we wouldn't make the same. We wouldn't have the same arrangements, but to change the charter of the UN
requires the unanimity of the permanent members.
So you're saying it would be great if Russia were to voluntarily give up its
veto.
And the second thing is that there is no real provision for expelling people out of the
UN because the principle of the UN is no matter how bad you are, you're still a member of
the UN.
You're a leader of a nation state that we will deal with.
We can kick them off the Human Rights Council, we can kick them off various agencies, but
membership in the UN is there. If you don't pay your dues, you can't vote eventually,
but otherwise you maintain your membership. So the Security Council thing is, I mean,
you'll appreciate, Paul, that for me as a former Canadian constitutional politician for many,
many years, when somebody says we'd like to continue to debate on the constitution of the United Nations,
I sort of say, I think I've seen this movie.
I've been there.
I've experienced it.
I'm not sure what it was, but it's over and
over again.
Since we're talking about the security council,
could Canada have won the last two times that
it tried to get on the security council? Are there structural things that are
just beyond our grasp?
And are we missing out because we're not on
the security council now?
Well, let me answer the last question.
The answer to the last question is no.
I don't want to personalize it with respect
to Mr. Harper under him, but I think there
was a sense among a number of countries that under his leadership, Canada was less interested
in the United Nations than it had been.
And I don't know whether that's a fair comment or not, but I think that's certainly something
that one hears.
I think the initiative that the Juneau government took was made within five years after that
defeat and ordinarily there's usually a 10 or 12 year gap between asks or candidacies.
And one of the problems we faced in that experience was that a number of countries had already
committed themselves to supporting others.
In particular, although we're a member of the group that's
called Western Europe and Others, which is the constituency from which we come, two countries
elected from it, it's hard for non-European countries to win at the best of times, and
it's very hard to win when you've added yourself as a third candidate in that group because within that group people have made their
pardon the expression they've made their deals so there's a lot of countries that
we would have assumed would be friendly to us and would say oh of course Canada
will support you who didn't support us and that I think is was a much more
significant part of the defeat than anything else.
And my advice to the government is based very much on my third point, and that is, in the
current context and in foreseeable future context, I don't know why you'd want to spend
a lot of your time and effort and money and engagement and everything else on the possibility
of sitting for two years on the Security Council. It's not easy for me to see the logic of that.
So maybe don't try next time.
Well, figure out when the coast is clear next time, when there's a vacancy, do as much diplomacy as required to figure out how do
we get ourselves in a stronger position before we run so you've got a whole bunch of people
lined up to support you before you go.
And understand that given the number of countries in the world, 193 as opposed to 53, which
it was in the old days, or 60 or 70 or 80, now you've got 193.
You've got to pick your spots well in advance if you want a clear run.
And that'll be a decision for the government and maybe future governments to make as to
what the timing is.
But my point is this, is there's a lot that we do, a lot of engagement that we have, a
lot of work that needs to be done that doesn't
involve being a member of the Security Council. There are 178 countries that are not members of
the Security Council right now, including a lot of big countries. And so you say,
does that mean they're less important than the UN? I mean, last year we were in
the top seven donor countries to the UN system. Top seven. That's a significant place for
us to be. And so we have a lot to say about what happens in the UNDP, but what happens
in UNICEF. We get asked questions about a number of issues where our views are
taken extremely seriously. We have a lot of ways of influencing the life and work of the UN in
every field of its endeavor. There are hundreds of Canadians of great talent and ability who are
working in the field for the UN or who are working in the head. We have two undersecretary generals of the United Nations now are Canadian. So we
have a lot to be proud of as a country of our current and ongoing
commitment and dedication to the UN and making it work more effectively. The fact
that we're not on the Security Council for two years is... I mean the countries that
won the Security Council vote that we were in, they're coming off the
Security Council this year. So that ends that for us. There's no point in worrying about last year's
snow. Even as the problems that you've been addressing and that you've described for us are increasingly spill across borders and around the world. There is also a rising
skepticism for multilateral solutions and multilateral institutions. Obviously,
a populist distrust of the World Health Organization and the UN and the World Trade Organization and
on and on and on, but also some academic journalistic skepticism that this stuff isn't
working even if it was a good idea and that nations need to retrench either to networks of
friends, so-called friend-shoring argument, or simply try and do what you can in the world
and hope for the best. I have to assume that's not your own read of things.
and hope for the best. I have to assume that's not your own read of things.
Well, the fact of the matter is that Canada joined with a number of other countries to create NATO four years after we created the United Nations. And in the charter of the United Nations, the formation of regional and other alliances is provided for.
So I don't think there's anything incompatible between sometimes nation-states have to do stuff,
sometimes regional groups have to do stuff, sometimes it has to be a broader basis of
understanding. I don't think it's quite as stark a division as
you might describe it. I mean we have a special economic relationship with the
United States and now with Mexico. The debate around that took place in the
1980s and 1990s and then back again under President Trump but I think there's
an over over all recognition among a broad group of people
that having that relationship is important to us and is to our advantage at the same
time as we remain committed to multilateral engagements of one kind or another.
I think it's important not to be simplistic in drawing out these distinctions, except to say that those who
would look to the more extreme forms of nationalism or the more extreme forms of xenophobia as being
the way forward, I think are completely wrong-headed. The challenges that the UK is now facing economically
and politically in many other ways, I think,
can be traced to the decision on Brexit.
That I think was the result of this populist desire to say, you know, let's get out of
Europe.
Let's be ourselves again.
Let's pretend we're Sir Francis Drake all over again.
And there's other ways in which the realities of the world just weigh in on that and say,
yeah, go ahead, see what happens. See how that works out for you. And I think there are many,
many other object lessons like that, which say that the more extreme forms of insistence on
state sovereignty as an absolute in this world that we're in, come up against the realities of
the market, the impacts of the global events that I've described. I mean, go ahead and tell COVID
that you're a nation state and you're independent. See what COVID says. Go ahead and tell climate
change that you want to be on your own and don't want to do what anybody else does. See how that
works out for you. I think we have to be smart enough to recognize that there are many features of our world
that where borders don't really play as big a part in deciding what's going to happen
as we might think. I feel a lot about it the way Churchill used to talk about democracy
where he said it's the worst form of government
except for all the others.
And I think you can say the UN has many, many faults and it's the worst form of global governance
except for all the others because the reality is it's a way that allows for the flexibility
of nation states and regional groupings to work side by side.
And I do think we've got to be careful in thinking that, particularly when we're
talking about the economy, in thinking that purely national solutions or directing
capital exactly where to go and how to behave are always going to be effective
or are going to work or are going to be frankly
in our best interest.
And that's something that I've actually learned.
So I share that with you.
You've already given future prime ministers some thoughts on whether and how to apply
for a security council seat.
Maybe we can broaden it a bit.
Obviously the current prime minister is eternal.
So if you were to put some advice in an envelope
for some future Canadian prime minister,
what would you tell them about what you've seen
about perceptions of Canada,
opportunities for Canada,
and hazards that Canada faces in the world
over the next several years?
As you know, from having josted with me in scrums over the years,
I don't like to answer hypothetical questions,
but quite apart from the construct of your question, I would say this.
What we say is extremely important.
The vision that we have and the words that we use are important,
and how we express them is important.
The clarity with which we express them, the vision that we share, the way in which we can we can try to
draw the lines of discussions today for example about information and
misinformation, about democracy and authoritarianism, about the rights of
women in the world today. These are all critically important for Canada to speak up about and to engage in and to
not be afraid to be part of a global conversation and lead a global conversation on these issues.
But there's always the test of what you do as well as what you say. And I think this is the test that
And I think this is the test that we should always apply to ourselves as people, as individuals, and as countries.
So we can't just preach a message to the world and then not practice it.
And the better we get at practicing it, the closer we get to really pushing ourselves,
setting our own standards, trying to set a standard for the world, the better off we
are, the stronger we are. The second thing I would say is as important as the domestic
constituency is, we have to fully appreciate the global nature of the challenges
that we face. And that really means understanding that how we're doing on the sustainable development
goals, for example, which are just sort of a common sense description of what good government is aiming for,
equality between women and men, ending serious poverty, improving world, you know, improving health care,
all the things that we look at domestically.
The line between those things and global issues is not as big a line as we might think it
is.
So we're going to have to continue to talk to Canadians, and who are after all a very
multicultural and multilingual group of people, about how quickly the world is shrinking.
I think future governments will be facing this even more than we
are and that's something that we have to have to bear in mind. And I think that
some of the things that I've learned in life is is something I would also say to
people that is never be afraid to admit when you're wrong, never be afraid to apologize
when it's the right thing to do, and learn how to walk humbly with the realities of life
and the limitations of life.
And I think the more Canada can do that, and we as Canadians can do that, the stronger
we'll be.
So if we talk about the rule of law, practice it in what we do.
When we talk about ending discrimination, practice it in what we do. Everything that
we say to other people is a test that we have to be prepared to apply to ourselves. And
quite frankly, in case these words are ever turned against me, I actually
think that the current government does that quite a lot in terms of how we've managed to change the
national conversation on indigenous issues. I think it's been remarkable and I hope it's sustained
by future governments. All right, let's end on that relatively optimistic note.
You've been very generous with your time.
I appreciate it.
Paul, it's always good to talk to you and, uh,
and I appreciate it as you get older and realize
how smart you still are.
Uh, I'm sure there'll be, I'm sure there'll still
be opportunities for us to engage.
Thank you very much.
Thanks for not keeping me in the doghouse forever.
You're not in the doghouse.
That's fine.
It's all good.
Thanks for listening to The Paul Wells Show.
The Paul Wells Show is produced by Antica, our senior producers Kevin Sexton, our associate
producers Haley Choi, our executive producers Lisa Gabriel, Stuart Cox is the president
of Antica.
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