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Canada: Martin and Chrétien testify in corruption scandal
By Keith Jones
19 February 2005
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Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin and Jean Chrétien,
his predecessor as head of the Liberal government, testified under
oath last week at a public inquiry investigating alleged government
corruption. Only once previously did a sitting or past Canadian
prime minister give public testimony in a like judicial proceeding.
That was in 1873, when Canadas first prime minister, Sir
John A. Macdonald, responded to charges his government had awarded
a railway contract in return for massive election campaign contributions
to his Conservative Party.
At Martins request, Justice John Gomery is investigating
a federal government program under which Ottawa paid out $250
million between 1996 and 2002 to sponsor sporting and cultural
events. Much of the money was funnelled through Liberal-friendly
advertising firms. It is not uncommon for Canadian governments,
whether federal or provincial, to steer government advertising
and consultancy work to firms known to be friendly to the party
in power. But in this case, internal government audits found the
program improperly managed, with financial records either nonexistent
or replete with errors and gaps.
A government study of contracts given to Le Groupe Polygone
Editeurs, which received $40 million in sponsorship money, said
that there appeared to have been systematic and egregious
overcharging for what was delivered. A subsequent investigation
by Canadas auditor-general found repeated instances of Groupe
Polygone and other firms receiving large payments in return for
little or no work. Criminal charges have been laid against several
advertising company executives.
There is little doubt some people criminally profited from
the sponsorship program. There are also good grounds to believe
that the programwhose ostensible purpose was to raise the
profile of the federal government in Quebec and thereby counter
the Quebec indépendantiste movementwas used
to finance the Quebec wing of the Liberal Party. According to
Alfonso Gagliano, who for much of this period was both the minister
responsible for the sponsorship program and the boss of the Quebec
Liberal machine, the Liberal Party was not rich. It,
however, did receive substantial donations from many of the firms
and executives of the firms that received sponsorship contracts
from Gaglianos Public Works Ministry or to which sponsorship
work was subcontracted.
That said, the sponsorship scandalthe blaring headlines
and feigned outrage of opposition politicians notwithstandingis
pretty much small potatoes. As the doyen of Canadian political
journalism Peter C. Newman conceded, patronage has always been
integral to the functioning of Canadas major political parties.
Patronage, wrote Newman in a recent op-ed piece, is
the udder of Canadian democracy. It has fuelled Canadian politics
since Sir John A. Macdonald, our Founding Father, accepted bribes
from would-be builders of the CPR.
The enormous amount of air-time and ink the corporate media
have devoted to the sponsorship scandal and the place it has taken
in the official political debate stand in sharp contrast to the
treatment accorded other cases of political corruption. Take,
for example, the millions of dollars in questionable contracts
that high-level operatives in the Ontario Tory government and
Ontario Conservative Party were given by the provinces Crown-owned
hydro companies between 1995 and 2003. As in the sponsorship scandal,
many of the contracts called for little if any real work. Yet
the press soon dropped the story.
And what of the revelation that Karlheinz Schreiber, a German-Canadian
arms dealer whom the German government is seeking to extradite,
paid former Progressive Conservative Prime Minister Brian Mulroney
$300,000in cash, in hotel roomsshortly after he left
office? Although Mulroneys explanationthat the money
was in return for the advice he gave Schreiber on a pasta-manufacturing
schemeis, to say the least, implausible, few newspapers
reported on Schreibers payments to Mulroney. None has pursued
the story.
If the sponsorship scandal has become such a major political
issue, it is because it has served as a mechanism through which
Canadas corporate and political elite have fought out matters
of leadership and policy direction.
The neo-conservative National Post and the official
opposition Canadian Alliancenow merged with the Tories in
the new Conservative Partyhave long-trumpeted allegations
of waste and corruption in government spending. They have done
so in order to discredit their Liberal rivals and, more generally,
with the aim of depicting government spending as out of control,
so as to bolster their crusade for tax cuts and for getting
government off the back of Canadians through privatization
and deregulation. In this they have been inspired, if not directly
advised, by the US Republicans who used a trumped-up financial
scandal, Whitewater, and then the Monica Lewinsky affair to destabilize
the Clinton administration and ultimately to try to unseat Clinton.
Paul Martin and his supporters in the Liberal Party and sections
of the ruling class who still view the Liberals as the party best
able to govern in their interestsbecause of residual popular
illusions in the Liberals being a party of the people
and because of the Liberals commitment to a strong federal
statealso made use of the sponsorship scandal and other
allegations of impropriety in pushing for Chrétien to retire.
And since the release of the auditor-generals damning
report on the sponsorship program last February, Martin and the
Conservatives, to say nothing of the pro-independence Bloc Québécois,
have all found it in their interest at various times to focus
public attention on the sponsorship scandal, so as to avoid discussion
of their own records, programs and intentions.
This choice of means is, of course, not without significance.
There is great popular dissatisfaction with, and disaffection
from, all the establishment parties, from the avowedly pro-big
business Conservatives through the social democrats of the New
Democratic Party, because they have all been party to the assault
on public and social services and trade union and democratic rights.
Because there is no popular constituency for big businesss
program of razing what remains of the welfare state, gutting all
regulatory restraints on capital, and bringing Canada into a closer
economic and geo-political partnership with Wall Street and Washington,
big business and its political representatives have increasingly
resorted to the politics of scandal and subterfuge and to nationalist
and other noxious appeals in moulding and manipulating public
opinion.
From Chrétien to Martin
Jean Chrétien, in a lengthy opening statement before
Justice Gomerys inquiry, made an impassioned defence of
his governments record, arguing explicitly that his government
had strengthened Canada and implicitly that he had well served
the interests of Canadian big business. The Wall Street Journal,
he observed, had warned shortly after he came to office that Canada
was being reduced to the status of a Third World country. But
his government had taken decisive action to put federal finances
in order. Boasted Chrétien, We had 10 great years
when we turned it around, we took deficit to surplus, we paid
the national debt.
Indeed, in terms of socioeconomic and fiscal policy, the Chrétien
Liberal government was far and away the most right-wing federal
government since the Great Depression. It slashed tens of billions
from health care and other public services, rewrote the rules
governing Canadas unemployment insurance program to deny
benefits to the majority of the jobless, and, once the annual
budget deficit was eliminated, announced a five-year, $100 billion
program of corporate and personal income tax cuts skewed to benefit
the rich and designed to ensure that the state lacked the resources
to reinvest in public services.
Nevertheless, big business became increasingly dissatisfied
with Chrétien, especially after the coming to power of
the Bush administration in 2001. Chrétiens Trudeau-era
Canadian nationalism, with its streak of anti-Americanism, his
reluctance to give a massive, multibillion-dollar permanent boost
to the military budget, and his failure to publicly promote privatization
and deregulation, were all seen as inimical to big businesss
interests.
Under conditions where the bourgeoisies traditional alternate
party of government, the Progressive Conservatives, had been reduced
to a rump, the most powerful sections of Canadian business fixed
on Martinhimself a multimillionaire businessman and Chrétiens
finance ministeras the best means of unseating Chrétien
and shifting the government further right.
Martin was thus egged on in his campaign to seize the leadership
of the Liberal Party and prime ministership, the first time a
sitting prime minister was felled from within his own party. Although
Martin did not directly raise the sponsorship issue during his
campaign for the prime ministership, he certainly benefited by
press suggestions that financial improprieties had taken place
under Chrétiens watch and alluded to the scandal
with his promises of doing politics differently.
What brought the sponsorship scandal to centre-stage was Martins
decision to fan public outrage over the auditor-generals
report castigating the program. Rather than downplaying the reports
significance, Martin declared himself mad as hell. He hailed the
reports author, Sheila Fraser, as a national hero, asserted
that there must have been political direction behind
the failure to follow normal government procedures in the awarding
and administering of contracts, fired Gagliano from his post as
Canadas ambassador to Denmark, and sacked several long-time
Liberals from their posts as heads of various Crown Corporations.
Invariably newspaper columnists have presented Martins
response to the auditor-generals report as a settling of
accounts with Chrétien and his faction of the Liberal Party.
Undoubtedly, personal rivalries and power struggles were involved.
But Martins decision to champion the sponsorship scandal
was also rooted in his anxiousness to demonstrate to big business
that his government was a new regime, not a continuation of the
Chrétien Liberal government.
Martins first actions on taking office all signalled
a shift to the right. He announced an immediate review of all
government spending and a freeze on recently announced expenditures.
He stressed his intention to mend fences with the Bush administration
and, after an initial get-acquainted meeting with Bush, declared
that any differences between the US and Canadian governments over
the Iraq war were now history.
The need to seek a popular mandate constrained Martin, however,
from fully satisfying businesss demand for a sharp shift
to the right, especially in the form of a new round of tax cuts,
the gutting of Canadas Kyoto Accord commitments, and a closer
partnership with the US. He and his aides decided instead to amplify
the sponsorship scandal, so as to demonstrate, pending a spring
election, that a new team with different ideas was in power.
The ruse failed. Martin apparently believed the media hype
about his being Canadas most popular political leader and
his unique bond with Canadians. But his trumpeting of the sponsorship
scandal sent Liberal polling numbers into freefall.
The Conservatives and Bloc Québécois, meanwhile,
fastened onto the sponsorship scandal. Both parties made the purported
fight against corruption in government the centrepiece of their
campaigns for the June 30 federal election. For the Conservatives,
the denunciations of Liberal corruption served as means of deflecting
popular attention from their right-wing program and party leader
Stephen Harpers record as a neo-conservative ideologue.
The election left the Liberals clinging to power, more than
20 seats short of a majority of in the House of Commons. Moreover,
Martins room for maneuver was further reduced by the large
increase in votes for parties that portray themselves as left-wing
opponents of the two major parties, the New Democratic Party,
Bloc Québécois and Greens.
Chrétien and Martin before the commission
Chrétien was the first of the two Liberal Party leaders
to appear before the Gomery Commission. He ceded nothing to his
critics, insisting that the sponsorship program had been an essential
part of the federal governments strategy to fight Quebec
separatism, and made his disdain for the commission clear to all.
Earlier Chrétiens lawyers had pressed for Judge
Gomery to step down as inquiry head, arguing that comments Gomery
made to the press in December that were critical of Chrétien
showed that he had prejudged the case and that his appointment
of Bernard Roy, one of the closest associates of Brian Mulroney,
as the commissions lead lawyer indicated bias. (Roy was
best man at Mulroneys wedding, later served as his chief
of staff, and currently works for the same law firm as Mulroney.)
Chrétien concluded his testimony with a farcical piece
of courtroom drama meant to underline his contempt for the proceedings.
He answered Gomerys quip that the governments purchase
of golf balls with his signature imprinted on them was small-town
cheap by pulling from his pocket golf balls he had received
from Presidents Bush and Clinton bearing their imprinted signatures,
as well as one produced for the law firm at which Mulroney and
Bernard Roy now work.
While Chrétien and the commission had their daggers
drawn, Justice Gomery and the commissions lawyers gave Martin
every opportunity to get out his message that he knew nothing
of the details of the sponsorship program, because he was preoccupied
with his duties as finance minister, and because Chrétien
and his aides made sure that he had no role in managing the Quebec
Liberal machine. Observing that it was rather rare
for a prime minister to testify before a public inquiry, government
lawyer Sylvain Lussier concluded his questioning of Martin by
asking, Is this an indication of how seriously you take
the commission?
The press reaction to Chrétiens and Martins
testimony is more significant than the scripted lines they delivered
during their respective appearances. While many newspaper columnists
and editorial writers insisted that Chrétien has much to
answer for, there was a grudging admiration for his grit and political
smarts.
The press was all but unanimous that Martin should be taken
at his word. But even as it exonerated the prime minister of all
blame for the sponsorship program, the press chastised him for
his earnest, long-winded answers and tied this to sharp criticisms
of his failure to show leadership. By this, they mean
his reluctance to court unpopularity by taking decisions, like
signing Canada on to the US missile defence program, strongly
supported by the corporate and political elite.
Only a short time ago, the corporate elite was fixated on the
need to replace Chrétien. Now, his successor Martin is
being derided as indecisive. According to the Economist,
Martins faltering leadership has earned him the sobriquet
of Mr. Dithers.
Yet the most powerful sections of the bourgeoisie have little
confidence in the Conservatives under Harper as an alternative.
They remain concerned about Harpers strong identification
with the demands of Western-based business and political interests
for a greater share of political power and are aghast over his
crude appeals to religious conservatismhe has said gay marriage
could be the first step toward the Liberals sanctioning polygamyand
over his failure to vigorously promote businesss neo-liberal
agenda or offer Martin the Conservatives support on missile
defence.
Even the National Post dismissed Harpers claim
that Martin wasnt ready to stand behind the Gomery inquiry,
when Chrétien sought to force the judge to step down, as
posturing, adding that Harpers Conservative
Party remains very much a work in progress.
Canadas corporate and political elite perceives itself
to be falling behind in the global struggle for markets and profits
and geo-political advantage and is increasingly frustrated at
its inability to sideline public opposition to its drive for more
tax cuts, the gutting of Medicare and other public services, the
building up of the Canadian armed forces, and full Canadian participation
in a Fortress America. This malaise has found expression in the
hullabaloo over the sponsorship scandal.
The bourgeoisie, however, has numerous mechanisms, economic
and political, to spur its political representatives rightward,
manipulate public opinion and deflect and smother oppositionnot
least the trade unions and the NDP.
The opposition of working people remains inchoate and largely
latent. It will only find coherent, progressive political expression
through the struggle for a new political orientationthe
mobilization of the working class as an independent and international
class against the profit system.
See Also:
Canada: Big business
exhorts Martin to demonstrate leadership by imposing unpopular
policies
[31 December 2004]
Canadas corporate
elite seeks closer partnership with Washington and Wall Street
[11 November 2004]
Canadian Liberals
cling to power, but results attest to mass popular disaffection
[30 June 2004]
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