Perfecting the Union Versus Packing It In

Obama wants to perfect his nation, Harper would rather his didn’t exist
If a country’s present circumstance is dire and the future bleak, it makes sense for the campaigning politician to pluck from the historical archive moments of transcendence upon which something new and special may be grafted. The Bush administration, amnesiac, innumerate, and having allowed dreamers and ideologues to direct matters of actual importance (adventures overseas, home mortgages, the value ascribed to a human life) has left the US mired in war, debt, and domestic alienation. Its idea well is dry, and with sub-prime mortgage lenders amorphous or in Albania, and the pool of available soldiers dwindling, soon enough the accounts receivable ledger will be empty, too, and the dike will burst.

Into this anxious moment steps a curious presence, Barack Obama. Given that the standing philosopher of hope, George W. Bush, attempted to sell an abstract noun, democracy, across the Middle East, and failed miserably, then watched as home ownership (the American dream) was offered to those without equity or liquidity; and given that his long tenure amounts to “Let’s try this and pray for the best,” one would imagine Americans having little time for “the audacity of hope.” And yet, with his promise of change and the potential for transcendence, Obama was initially embraced: no other fresh option presented itself. But then, aided and abetted by YouTube if not the mainstream media, doubt set in, and as the dead weight of a Wednesday afternoon hung over the commons, the still-sentient wondered: “Haven’t we heard this hope thing before . . . Does this black and white tyro have the strategic chops to deliver us from doom?”

Buffeted by accusations that he took counsel from a conspiracy theorist — not Donald Rumsfeld or Paul Wolfowitz, but his own pastor, Jeremiah Wright, a man who allegedly hates white America and believes that its purpose is to poison, degrade, and sacrifice blacks — Obama was in danger of coming across as a Democratic menace to match the neo-conservative, blissfully optimistic, and sometimes apocalyptic Bush. He responded by combing the historical archive and settling on a notion: perfecting the union.

The US Constitution, Obama said in a speech that captivated all but the most partisan cranks, was born of contradiction: it speaks eloquently of freedom in the context of slavery. However, he continued — not as a preacher might but as a cool Harvard graduate would — at various moments of historical impasse this foundational contract between citizens and the state has been amended and improved. That is, even on the knottiest issue of the American narrative, race relations, there has been positive change.

Knowing that the condensed feedback loop of Wright’s incendiary comments would unspool right through the Democratic Convention in August — a constant reminder that race relations remained mired in the muck — Obama did not hide, apologize for his associations, or content himself with conjuring up the ghosts of Martin Luther King Jr. and John F. Kennedy. Instead, he insisted that perfecting the union required the ability to embrace conflicting ideas, and to see good as well as evil in history’s long march.

The speech was many things — nation building, a call to collective responsibility, liberal and conservative — and, in its modesty, it was also strategically brilliant. Here was a man, sometimes ecstatic but now intensely sober, who presented himself as Bush and Hillary Clinton’s opposite. The US represents not the end of history, as Bush would have it, but an experiment and historical challenge, and a commander-in-chief should know this. Vis-à-vis Clinton, Obama’s formative experiences are indeed outside the Beltway, but in this gamble for the presidency he will put them in context and not exaggerate their import. A path forward — one not marred by merchants of fear or the entitled few, but tempered, nuanced, and demanding — has been articulated. It was a grown-up and generous moment, and the country took notice. For a day, at least, history and hope had been restored, and made rational.

And in this election year for the US and perhaps for us, how is Canada faring in perfecting its union? Do we even have one to perfect, and from our history can anything useful be gleaned?

Years ago, on biannual trips, I always enjoyed visiting watering holes in St. John’s. The Ship Inn was a lively spot with elevated chatter and excellent beer. As elsewhere, talk included salty descriptions of local ne’er-do-wells, a possible union of the Atlantic provinces, and expressions of fealty for Newfoundland’s federal representatives. Laughter followed portrayals of John Crosbie’s more bombastic moments, and wry smiles accompanied character sketches of contemporary politicos on the federal scene. Ottawa’s Parliament, not the house that Joey Smallwood built, it struck me, was the important theatre; and when his name came up, as it did before and after the witching hour, there were expressions of remorse over “the biggest giveaway in history” (the hydroelectric agreement with Quebec over Churchill Falls), but little rancour about Smallwood bringing the province into Confederation. A deal had been made, and so be it.

Today, as offshore oil becomes a reality, this is changing. Now it is Premier Danny Williams who is considered the Rock’s true blood, and his message to the rest of Canada (roc) is clear: we’re grateful for our past association, but hands off Newfoundland oil. No one can begrudge sudden good fortune to a province long desperate for it, and the collapse of the cod fishery is still largely blamed on Ottawa, but such triumphalist local rhetoric remains troubling.

This March, by day alighting on the ski slopes of Mount Sutton in Quebec’s Eastern Townships, by night attempting to make sense of my home province’s current socio-political discourse — that the St. Patrick’s Day parade in Montreal is “too English”; that schoolchildren learn Quebec, not French, French; that the need for a referendum has been eclipsed — I sensed a level of bankruptcy of another order. Decades ago, there was a high-minded battle for secession or sovereignty-association, and a response from the roc: if anything makes this nation unique, it is the French fact, and in the context of English North America a federal shelter will protect a provincial asset and build upon it. Schoolchildren in Toronto, Calgary, and Vancouver were enrolled in French immersion, laws and cereal boxes from coast to coast appeared in both official languages, and if a sweetheart deal from Ottawa went to La Belle Province most of us turned a blind eye, the odd quid pro quo deemed necessary to keep a lid on things in the streets of Montreal, if not Quebec City.

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3 comment(s)

jrMay 29, 2008 16:14 EST

veracity!

AnonymousJuly 02, 2008 10:09 EST

Canada has struggled with issues of unity and factionalism since early days. It has shaped our history, our social norms and our institutions. I tend to believe our history in most of the 20th century pivoted around our pride in statesmanship - It amazes me how times have changed that Canada has lost its vision of a nation. Mr Alexander has raised an excellent point that the provinces each will do what is good for them and rightly so, in order to take care of their local residents. Provinces need not worry about the international stage, much less what is happening in the next province over. But this approach is myopic at best and self-destructive at worst. At an age when we are just realizing how interdependent we are due to our relationship with Earth itself, I'm not sure we can afford this level of selfishness purely in the interests of survival.

It's with great interest I have observed changes living here in Australia over the past four years. Just four years ago, I was innundated with a right-winged mentality under the Howard government. I was initially skeptical, but relieved and surprised when Australian voters unequivocally chose Rudd, who is perhaps the polar opposite of the previous prime minister. In a very short time the rhetoric has shifted away from the right. Sustainability, aboriginal inclusion, multicultural issues, workplace rights, and shifting troops towards peacekeeping missions have all shown up as government initiatives. Could it be that Australia is the new Canada?

We have to stop resting on the laurels of Tommy Douglas and universal health care. I can't help thinking that everything we are proud of as Canadians occurred several decades ago. What have we done lately? I tend to agree with Patels (above) - nationhood doesn't just happen, it has to be chosen, and lived.

AnonymousJanuary 22, 2011 13:43 EST

This article should give great encouragement and inspiration to all Liberals. The writer's abvious love and devotion for Barack Obama resonates throughout. And of course Mr Obama is a perfect example of all things Liberal, and a graduate of Harvard. Well then, Mr. Ignatieff is also a perfect example of all things Liberal, also a graduate of Harvard, and also an American like Mr Obama. Oh! he isnt? Yeah but, he said he was. Okay, I guess I've gotten it wrong. Anyway, I used to subscribe to the Walrus, but simply couldnt stomach the sactimonious bleating any longer and ignored their many annoying requests that I renew my subscription. So good luck with Mr Obama's run for a second term, he's going to need it. There are so many of us baddies out there trying to derail him. By the way, Canada is still Canada when the Liberals are out of power. The devine right of Liberals to rule does not allow them to remove our existence as a nation on those occasions when the electorate decides to dump them. And a pleasant good day to all.

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