Canadians pick Pierre Trudeau, Medicare as Number One in
online consultation process
By Michael J Morris
Just imagine that you were the prime minister of Canada and had
approved a poll, paid for by the taxpayers, to come up with a Top 10 list of our
country's greatest heroes, and you and your political party were essentially
shut out by the almost 12,000 Canadians who participated.
Well that's the news Stephen Harper and the Harpercon government
received recently as the result of an online consultation process over several
months, conducted as part of the preparations for Canada's 150th birthday in
2017.
The Canadian Press announcing the results said that "Canadians have
handed the Harper government a Top 10 list of the country’s greatest heroes,
featuring some of the Conservative party’s greatest adversaries, past and
present."
It is unlikely that the results would ever have seen the light of
day had the Canadian Press not obtained them under an Access to Information Act
request, even though, we, the taxpayers paid for the project.
In answer to a question "Which Canadians have inspired you the
most over the past 150 years?" leading the list was none other than Pierre
Trudeau, a name which would most assuredly have sent the Harpercons into a fit
of rage. The former prime minister not only made the Top 10, he was Number
One.
The rest of the Top 10 list in order were: Marathon of Hope runner
Terry Fox; former NDP leader and premier of Saskatchewan Tommy Douglas; former
Liberal prime minister Lester B. Pearson; astronaut Chris Hadfield;
environmental activist David Suzuki; former NDP leader Jack Layton; Canada's
first prime minister, a Conservative, Sir John A. Macdonald; hockey legend Wayne
Gretzky and outstanding soldier and recently retired Liberal senator Romeo
Dallaire.
To me at least, it looks like a pretty Canadian list, and I was
really delighted that Don Cherry did not make the cut. The only Tory was Sir
John A. If he was still around, it is highly unlikely he would make it into a
Harper cabinet, much less become prime minister leading the Conservative Party
as it is constituted today -- Liberal maybe?
Canadian Press reported that the consultation also asked which of
Canada’s accomplishments of the last 150 years “make you most proud to be a
Canadian?”
The results showed that medicare topped that list, followed by peacekeeping, then the 1982 Charter of Rights and Freedoms at No. 3. The rest in order were: Canada's contribution to World War II; the Canadarm; multiculturalism; contribution to World War I; bilingualism; space exploration, and the Constitution Act of 1982.
The results showed that medicare topped that list, followed by peacekeeping, then the 1982 Charter of Rights and Freedoms at No. 3. The rest in order were: Canada's contribution to World War II; the Canadarm; multiculturalism; contribution to World War I; bilingualism; space exploration, and the Constitution Act of 1982.
Again, although one may switch the preference order of the Top 10,
a pretty Canadian type list of what makes us proud to be Canadian, although not
exactly the Harpercon view for Canada.
As the Canadian Press story notes for example, the present government has "recently been buffeted by a series of Charter-based losses at the Supreme Court of Canada, (and) did not mark the 25th anniversary of the Charter in 2007, nor the 30th in 2012."
As the Canadian Press story notes for example, the present government has "recently been buffeted by a series of Charter-based losses at the Supreme Court of Canada, (and) did not mark the 25th anniversary of the Charter in 2007, nor the 30th in 2012."
In 2015, Canadians will judge the Harpercons at the polls.
Personally, I am proud to be a Canadian, and generally agree with the Top 10
list of those who inspire me and the accomplishments that make me proud. Thanks
to the Canadian Press for obtaining the results of the consultation and making
them public. My email is mj.morris@live.ca
Full disclosure: I am not now and never have been a member of the Citizens for a Livable Cranbrook Society; however, I did conduct a workshop for its members for which I was paid.
Full disclosure: I am not now and never have been a member of the Citizens for a Livable Cranbrook Society; however, I did conduct a workshop for its members for which I was paid.
How about two ex-pats for the Canadian top 10 list? Dr. Norman Bethune inspired Tommy Douglas among others and is virtually venerated by more than a billion Chinese for the care he provided during the communist revolution. John Kenneth Galbraith is considered one of the greatest economists ever and his economic theories were a great influence on President John Kennedy.
ReplyDelete(Gerry Warner)
Good suggestions Gerry.. I might have included Dr Frederick Banting who with Dr Best discovered insulin.
ReplyDeleteThanks for all the comments .. My tentative conclusion is that folks want their government(s) to be open, honest and transparent. Basically hiding a report such as this until Canadian Press uncovered it, begs the question "what else are the Harpercons hiding?"
ReplyDelete