It’s a cliché, sure. It’s hackneyed and overdone, true. It has been done a million times, agreed. But it’s fun: the columnist’s year-end political winner/loser list! And, this year, regular readers got in on the act!
But, however … just as I was typing this, a bombshell landed. The federal ethics commissioner ruled that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau broke multiple federal ethics rules when he hopped onto the Aga Khan’s private helicopter and stayed on his island retreat over the holidays in 2016.
In her 74-page ruling, Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner Mary Dawson ruled that Trudeau violated the Conflict of Interest Act when he and his family accepted the trip. She also dismissed various complaints about l’Affaire Aga Khan, but so what. She found him, a sitting prime minister, guilty of a serious conflict of interest.
Now, I previously and vigorously defended Trudeau on the Aga Khan mess, but none of that particularly matters anymore. While the penalty is puny, Dawson’s decision is something we will be hearing about for years to come. I don’t think this has ever happened to a prime minister before.
A very unhappy-looking Trudeau accordingly had no option but to accept the report, apologize and promise never to do it again.
That, then, is the political screw-up of the year and it came at the very end of the year, too. The other contenders, up until that point, were:
- Trudeau et al. sucking up to U.S. President Donald Trump, and having nothing to show for it;
- Conservative Party Leader Andrew Scheer’s relationship with the racist/anti-Semitic luminaries at Rebel Media;
- New Democrat Party Leader Jagmeet Singh and his party going into the witness protection program right after their leadership vote;
- and, naturally, Heritage Minister Melanie Joly with her serial screw-ups: Netflix, Canada 150, Holocaust memorial, $6 million non-hockey hockey rink, and doing nothing about the death of dozens of Canadian newspapers.
Those were all solid contenders, but the Trudeau-Aga Khan mess is, indisputably, the political screw-up of the year. (And the prime minister’s office staffer who let this happen? You need to be fired, pronto.)
But what about the biggest political win in 2017?
- Trudeau had a pair, flipping two Conservative ridings in byelections;
- Scheer had his come-from-behind leadership victory, narrowly beating out a cocky frontrunner;
- a turban-wearing Sikh man won a party leadership;
- write-in candidates included Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland thumbing her nose at Russian dictator Vladimir Putin;
- as well as Jason Kenney creating, then taking over, the United Conservative Party in Alberta.
But my regular readers (and me) were nearly-unanimous: something wonderful was said – about us (as a people) and about the victor (as a man) – when Singh won the New Democratic Party leadership on the first ballot. In the Trump-Brexit era, where ignorance and bigotry seemingly hold sway everywhere, Canadians – of every political persuasion – were quietly proud that a bearded, brown-skinned man with a turban could be considered a possible prime minister. It’s a huge win for him and for us as a people, too.
Most and least-successful politicians varied. But, for the most part, regular readers and commenters agreed: Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall and Trudeau were the top two most-successful politicians in Canada in 2017. Popular write-in candidates, however, included the aforementioned Freeland and Kenney, but also federal Health Minister Jane Philpott, and Montreal’s new mayor, Valérie Plante.
Least-successful politicians? There were plenty of those. Joly always ranks high on everyone’s naughty list – and particularly among Liberals, who remain privately livid that such a lightweight could be shoehorned into cabinet. Finance Minister Bill Morneau, the Liberal Party’s human piñata, also received his fair share of brickbats. Singh, too, for winning the leadership on a wave of expectation and promise – and then promptly disappearing into a witness protection program somewhere.
But it was Scheer who was seen, almost universally, as a dud. Some correspondents critiqued the Conservative Party leader for turning invisible (à la Singh) right after his leadership win – and others criticized him for being far too visible (as in his Lynchian, saturnalian “I’m Andrew” ad). Either way, Scheer has underwhelmed many. He is, as my wife put it, remarkably unremarkable.
And the story that will dominate Canadian politics in 2018? Will it be the end of the North American Free Trade Agreement? Election upheaval in Ontario, New Brunswick, Quebec? #MeToo finally landing on Parliament Hill and exacting divine retribution?
Respondents were all over the map on this one. Some thought the, ahem, potpourri of pot laws will be the big story. Others: “God knows, but something Trump-related.” On the provincial front, some ventured to say that Liberals would be returned in New Brunswick – but lose narrowly in Quebec and Ontario.
I remain in awe of #MeToo. It has swept aside the rich, the famous and the powerful – and it shows no sign of slowing down. When it hits Ottawa in 2018, as it will, it will strike with righteous (and overdue) fury – and it will claim the political careers of many creepy little men.
Lots of opinions, lots of dissent. At the end of the year – at the end of the column – one thing unites us all:
Thank God we live in Trudeau’s Canada – and not Trump’s America!
A wonderful 2018 to all.
Warren Kinsella is a Canadian journalist, political adviser and commentator.
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