Bill C-51
Reveals Harper's Inner Bully
The need to ramp up civic literacy is
'critical.'
By Murray Dobbin
March 20,
2015 "ICH"
- "The
Tyee" - The Harper
government's pursuit of its odious Secret
Police Act (Bill C-51) is just another
chapter in the most through-going, and
massive social engineering project in the
history of the country.
Social engineering used to
be one of the favourite phrases of the right
in its attack on social programs -- accusing
both liberal-minded politicians and meddling
bureaucrats with manufacturing the welfare
state. They conveniently ignored the fact
that there was huge popular demand and
support for activist government.
That was the so-called
golden age of capitalism and it wasn't just
because of expanding government services. It
was so-called because of a much broader and
well-informed citizen engagement -- both
through social movements and as individual
citizens. The level of trust in government
was much higher than it is today. And absent
from the picture were the factors that today
dominate the political conversation: fear
and economic insecurity.
Exactly how historians
will describe this period in Canadian
history is anyone's guess but one approach
could be to look upon the Harper era as an
experiment in revealing how vulnerable
democracies are to political sociopaths bold
enough and ruthless enough to bend or break
every rule and tradition on which
democracy's foundation rests.
Contempt for
Parliament
It's not just the
institutions that are vulnerable though they
certainly are. It's a familiar list
including Harper's bullying of former
governor-general Michaëlle Jean to force the
proroguing of the House, his guide book on
how to make parliamentary committees
ineffective, the use of robo-calls and other
election dirty tricks, his attempt to break
the rules in appointing a Supreme Court
judge and his neutering the House of Commons
question period through a deliberate
strategy of refusing to answer questions --
a practice that institutionalizes a contempt
for Parliament that spreads outward to the
general public. At a certain point it
doesn't matter who is responsible -- the
institution itself becomes risible and
irrelevant to ordinary citizens. Which is,
of course, exactly what Harper intends.
And that brings us to the
other element of democratic politics -- the
actual citizens who are supposed to be the
raw material of democracy. The whole
institutional edifice theoretically rests on
the foundation of the voting public. The
extent to which the institutions of
democracy can be assaulted and eroded with
impunity is directly proportional to the
level of civic literacy. The lower it is,
the easier it is for autocrats like Harper
to abuse their power.
In terms of civic literacy
we are somewhere between Europe where it is
relatively high and the U.S. where it is
frighteningly low. While the question is
obviously more complicated than this, it's
not far-fetched to suggest that there is a
continuum -- with consumerism at one end and
highly engaged citizenship at the other. We
live in a hyper-consumer society -- not a
citizen-society characterized by the
oft-repeated disclaimer "I'm not interested
in politics." The growing basis for our
culture is not community or cooperation but
conspicuous consumption and possessive
individualism.
So long as the political
elite accepted the basic premises of modern
democracy and activist government, so long
as the institutions they controlled
functioned more or less within their defined
mandates (that is, they were only
occasionally abused) society could function
with a minimal level of civic literacy. We
could all go shopping more or less assured
that the stuff of government (in substance
and process) would continue undisturbed. If
all political parties accepted the precepts
of civil liberties, for example, it didn't
matter that much if there was a low degree
of public awareness of the importance of
civil liberties to our daily lives.
But when a politician
suddenly appears on the scene willing to
systematically violate democratic principles
as if they simply don't apply to him then
the demand for increased civic literacy is
just as suddenly urgent and critical. Yet it
is not something can be accomplished easily
or quickly. Three sources come to mind:
schools, the media and civil society
organizations and activity.
Despite the best efforts
of teachers and their unions over the
decades civic literacy is extremely low on
the curriculum totem pole in Canadian
schools. Provincial governments have
resisted such pressures, which should hardly
come as a surprise. There is a built in bias
in a hierarchical, capitalist society
against critical thinking -- precisely
because in liberal democracies the
over-arching role of government is to manage
capitalism with a view to maintaining it
along with all its inherent inequalities.
Too many critical thinkers are not helpful.
Media played role
The media, of course, are
largely responsible for helping put Stephen
Harper in power. Ever since the
Machiavellian Conrad Black bought up most of
Canada's dailies they have been used (by him
and his successors) as an explicit
propaganda tool for the dismantling of the
post-war democratic consensus. While there
are some tentative signs that they now
recognize they've created a monster (Globe
editorials criticizing the PM on a number of
issues like Bill C-51) it's a little late.
Twenty-five years of telling people there is
no alternative to unfettered capitalism has
had a pernicious effect on both democracy
and civic literacy.
That leaves voluntary (for
the most part) civil society organizations.
Yet, despite their objective of informing
people about the myriad issues we face,
here, too, the model falls short of
significantly expanding the base of engaged,
informed citizens. Ironically, much of the
defensive politics of the left are the
mirror image of Harper's reliance on fear
(of Muslims, criminals, niqabs, terrorists,
environmentalists, unions, the CBC) to
energize his base. We peddle more mundane
but substantive fears -- of losing medicare,
of climate change, of higher tuition fees,
of unprotected rivers and streams and dirty
oil.
If Canadians are scared
silly, it's no wonder given the mode of
politics directed at them.
Regrettably there is no
model from Canadian history that points us
in the direction of serious commitment to
civic literacy. We have to look to the
Scandinavian countries. According to
Canadian author
Henry Milner the late "Swedish Prime
Minister Olof Palme once said that he
preferred to think of Sweden not as a social
democracy but as a 'study-circle democracy.'
The idea... is associated most of all with
the efforts of the ABF (the Workers'
Educational Association)... The ABF offers
courses in organizing groups and
co-operatives, understanding media, and a
broad range of contemporary issues, as well
as languages, computers, art, music, and
nature appreciation." There were 10 other
groups doing study circles -- many of them
subsidized by the government. Half of all
Swedish adults were involved in them.
Even in Sweden the model
is no longer as robust as it was when Milner
wrote this assessment (2002). But even after
the defeat of Social Democratic governments,
no party has dared undermine Swedish social
programs or run roughshod over its
democracy. That's because informed citizens
are not easily manipulated by fear and their
level of trust in government remains high.
Given our shamefully
biased media, Canadians still manage to
resist Harper's continued assault on our
political sensibility. The first polls on
the Secret Police Act (don't call it by any
other name) were alarming with upwards of 80
per cent agreeing with the need for tougher
anti-terror laws. But things are changing
very quickly as the result of a determined
fight-back by civil society groups, a
phalanx of heavy-hitting experts and the NDP.
A
Forum Research poll this week showed
support for the bill was down to 38 per cent
with those disapproving at 51 per cent -- an
amazing turn around. The highest levels of
disapproval were amongst "...the youngest
(64 per cent), New Democrats (77 per cent),
the best educated (65 per cent) and the
non-religious (70 per cent)."
Yet the Forum results are
decidedly mixed and demonstrate how much
work there is yet to be done to neutralize
the fear campaign. When respondents were
presented with specific parts of the bill
the percentage disapproving actually
decreased and supporters increased.
The polling will no doubt
continue to demonstrate confusion, a desire
to deal with the real problem of terrorism
and condemnation of the attempt to label
environmentalists and First Nations as
terror suspects.
Yet a huge effort will be
needed to completely immunize Canadians
against the next wave of Harper fear
mongering. Imagine if all these efforts and
similar warning campaigns had instead been
put into creating something similar to the
Swedish "study circle democracy." That's the
only lasting solution to voter manipulation
and a healthy democracy. Until we realize
that, progressive politics will remain
crisis management and we will continue to
pin our desperate hopes on coalitions and
proportional representation. But without a
high degree of civic literacy these
institutional fixes will be ultimately
dissatisfying.