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Clinton appeals for Canadian unity
By Keith Jones
12 October 1999
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President Bill Clinton has demonstratively reaffirmed Washington's
support for the unity of Canada, the US's northern neighbor and
largest trade partner.
At the opening of the United States' new Ottawa embassy last
Friday, Clinton voiced support for a "strong, united and
democratic Canada." Then, in an address to a Canadian government-sponsored
symposium on federalism held at Mont Tremblant, Quebec, the US
president touted the Canadian federal state as an example to the
world: "For two centuries you have shown the world how people
of different cultures can live together in peace, prosperity and
mutual respect, in a country where human differences are democratically
expressed, not forcefully repressed."
Clinton's speech, which closed the International Conference
on Federalism, was widely interpreted as a strong rebuff to Quebec's
ruling provincial party, the Parti Québécois (PQ),
which had sought to use the conference to make the case for Quebec
independence. Calling for national minorities thinking of independence
to ask serious questions, Clinton delivered an unmistakable
message to Quebec.
Before pursuing secession, said Clinton, a people should ask,
"Is there an abuse of human rights? Is there a way people
can get along if they come from different heritages? Are minority
rights as well as majority rights respected?... How are we going
to cooperate with our neighbors; is it going to be better or worse
if we are independent or if we have a federalist system?"
"If every racial and ethnic and religious group that occupies
a specific piece of land" seeks independence, continued the
president, "we might have 800 countries in the world....
Maybe we'd have 8,000." Such a development, he declared,
would threaten international cooperation and the world economy.
Canadian government officials and the press were quick to seize
on Clinton's remarks, claiming they constituted a stunning rebuke
to Quebec Premier and PQ leader Lucien Bouchard, who had sharply
criticized the Canadian federal system and Canada's treatment
of Quebec in his welcome address to the conference.
But the US president's remarks were also clearly an attempt
to give a veneer of coherence and principle to US foreign policy.
Major military interventions by the US and its allies in the Balkans
and now East Timor have been largely justified on the grounds
of upholding national self-determination. At the same time, the
US remains a strong ally of regimes, such as those in Turkey and
Sri Lanka, that have waged violent repression and war against
minority groups opposing systematic state discrimination, and
Washington is generally strongly supportive of the nation-state
system.
Certainly if Clinton applied his own question(Is it going
to be better or worse if we are independent or if we have a federalist
system?)to the former Yugoslavia, he would have to admit
that Washington's support for Croatian and Bosnian independence
was, at the very least, a catastrophic mistake.
Needless to say, none of the mob of reporters covering Clinton's
speech asked the president to go beyond platitudes and explain
the contradictions in Washington's invocation of national self-determination.
The giddy response of Canada's political elite to Clinton's
speech underscores the depth of its anxiety over the future of
the Canadian federal state. "Clinton buoys federal cause,"
proclaimed the Globe and Mail. The Toronto Sun,
a right-wing tabloid that usually castigates and ridicules Clinton,
ran a banner headline across its front page, "Vive le Canada
libre." This was a reference to a 1967 speech by French President
Charles de Gaulle that almost caused a rupture in diplomatic relations
between France and Canada. Speaking from the steps of Montreal's
City Hall, the French president voiced support for Quebec's secession,
declaring "Vive le Québec, Vive le Québec libre!
[Long live Quebec! Long live free Quebec!]
Although opinion polls continue to show that a majority of
Quebecers oppose separation, Canada's political elite is haunted
by the specter of another referendum on independence. In October
1995, the PQ fell only 50,000 votes short of obtaining majority
support for negotiating a new partnership with Canada based on
the recognition of Quebec as a sovereign state.
Primer Minister Chretien and the opposition Reform Party now
routinely threaten that Quebec could be partitioned were it to
secede from Canada's federal state. The federal Liberal cabinet
is reported to be debating whether to introduce legislation giving
the government of Canada a role in the writing of any future referendum
question and/or stipulating that a majority greater than 50 percent
plus 1 will be necessary for secession.
Taking advantage of diplomatic protocol which calls for a visiting
head of state to meet with the premier of any province he visits,
Lucien Bouchard demanded an audience with Clinton. He was allowed
to meet with the US president for 20 minutes, but Ottawa exercised
its right to insist that Canada's US ambassador, Raymond Chretien,
who is also the prime minister's nephew, attend the Clinton-Bouchard
meeting.
At the conclusion of his meeting with the US president, the
PQ premier was anxious to proclaim his loyalty to Wahsington:
"I told him ... that in any case ... no matter what the outcome
of our internal political debates, whatever Quebec's political
future, the United States will always find in Quebec an ardent
partner in free trade and a very great friend."
Founded in 1968, the PQ once had radical pretensions, claiming
to be a party fighting for the "national liberation of the
Québécois" and having a "favorable prejudice"
to the workers movement. But after gaining provincial office in
1976 and enacting discriminatory language laws that boosted the
career prospects of the French-speaking middle class, the PQ moved
sharply to the right and into open conflict with the working class.
Since becoming premier in 1996, Bouchard has presided over
massive cuts to social spending and used draconian labor laws
to quell worker discontent.
In the 1970s the PQ's founder, Réné Lévesque,
routinely met with David Rockefeller and US diplomatic personnel
to reassure them that the PQ was no threat to the interests of
Washington and Wall Street. In recent decades, the PQ's pro-US
stance has become even more pronounced.
In a law adopted prior to the 1995 referendum, the PQ stipulated
that an independent Quebec would belong to NATO, the North American
Free Trade Agreement and other US-led alliances. Now many PQ leaders
are urging Canada adopt the US dollar as its currency, believing
this will reduce the leverage of its Canadian rivals on the Quebec
economy and reassure its middle-class supporters that independence
is not a radical program.
The Mont Tremblant conference, which was attended by leading
political figures and academics from 25 countries, was also noteworthy
for the ignorance of its Canadian participants. In their respective
speeches to the conference, neither Canadian Prime Minister Jean
Chretien nor Quebec Premier Bouchard could correctly identify
the year in which the Canadian federal state was born, 1867.
Questioned by reporters, an MP from the PQ's federal sister
party, the Bloc Québécois, singled out a speech
by the Sri Lankan Justice Minister, Gamini Lakshman Peiris, as
proof that whereas Canada's federal regime is "sclerotic,"
elsewhere federalism is "moving." The Peoples Alliance
regime of which Peiris is part has continued the brutal 15-year
war aimed at securing the Sri Lankan state's domination over the
island's Tamil-speaking northern and eastern regions.
See Also:
Canada
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