I'd say that's a 'NO'
Bishop, Jordan
REPORT FROM OTTAWA I'D SAY THAT'S A 'NO' CANADA HANGS TOGETHER wo days before Canadians went to the polls on October 26 to vote on the framework for a new constitutional agreement, Canadian...
...We were here a long time before it [the accord], and we shall be here a long time after it...
...Applications or suggestions should be sent to: Editor, Commonweal, 15 Dutch Street, New York, N.Y...
...But Stephen Lewis, former Canadian ambassador to the United Nations, said that if the question of self-government for aboriginal peoples, which Mulroney's Conservative party had stressed as a prime reason for voting yes, were so important, there was no reason why the government should not give it top priority along with the economy...
...The business manager will work with the publisher and staff on a wide variety of business tasks...
...The rest of the province was resolutely opposed, as were Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Columbia, and the Yukon...
...JORDAN BISHOP Jordan Bishop, a frequent Commonweal contributor, lives in Ottawa...
...Canadians apparently wanted reasoned argument...
...In Quebec, a poll taken following the accord's defeat indicated that the majority of the province (54 percent) remained steady in opposing secession...
...Early in the six-week campaign it was pointed out that there was no single no...
...Many observers had already noted that the agreement—a political compromise covering the allocation of federal and provincial powers, aboriginal self-government, the recognition of Quebec as a "distinct society," and a brand new Senate with eight members from each province— was far too complex for a simple yes/no decision...
...An elected Senate in which Prince Edward Island (population 120,000) had the COMMONWEAL BUSINESS MANAGER In the next five months, we will be adding a business manager to our staff...
...But to these bodies was to be added a new institution, a First Ministers Conference, composed of provincial premiers and the federal prime minister...
...It was concentrated in Ottawa and Toronto...
...Even within aboriginal communities—many of whose leaders had fought hard to get aboriginal self-government formalized in the constitution—the NO vote ran from 60 to 70 percent...
...In Ontario, the yes vote carried by the narrowest of margins: 49.8 to 49.6 percent...
...Ultimately the job will include responsibility for circulation, promotion, fund-raising, development, and general business matters as well as supervising the business staff...
...Pundits appear to agree now that the no vote came from six or seven different directions at once, and that it represented an anti-establishment mood in the country...
...Many felt that all this was too complex for a yes/no decision...
...The final vote nationwide was 53.7 percent no, 45.3 percent yes...
...Anyone interested should send a resume and a letter describing suitability for the position and acquaintance, if any, with the magazine...
...So they voted no...
...He expressed some amazement that Canada is now governed by politicians who can apparently do only one thing at a time...
...While Jacques Parizeau, leader of the Parti Quebecois, was head of the Quebec no Committee, there was also a strong group of young dissident Liberals ranged around Jean Allaire, who had led the Quebec Liberal party's commission on constitutional reform...
...We are looking for someone to pursue the business interests of the magazine with vigor and intelligence, someone with promotion and business skills committed to working with a small staff and a limited budget to ensure the financial future of Commonweal...
...Opposing it were the separatist Parti Quebecois, the National Action Committee on the Status of Women (NAC), a strong sector of youth from the ruling Quebec Liberal party, the right-wing populist Reform party, a varied assortment of dissidents, trade unions, and Pierre Elliot Trudeau...
...Readers are invited to join in our search by passing on this announcement or by letting us know of potential candidates...
...10038 Commonweal 4 December 1992:1 same representation as Quebec (over 6 million) and Ontario (over 8 million), presented problems enough for some...
...A Saskatchewan cartoonist caught the mood exactly: one pollster says to another, both standing in front of a bungalow as a television set comes crashing out the window: "I'd say that's a no...
...Rural, southwestern, and northern Ontario—the latter with a strong aboriginal and francophone population—voted decisively no...
...Known as the "Charlottetown Accord," the agreement had been worked out among federal and provincial political leaders at a meeting held last August 28 in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island...
...She and the N AC leadership felt the accord had been worked out without the participation of women and gave them nothing...
...They got more of it from the no campaign...
...This, however, may have reflected less a mistrust of aboriginal leadership than a mistrust of the establishment-sanctioned political process...
...Nova Scotia voted no in a nearly tied vote...
...Life goes on...
...Perhaps Elijah Harper did have the last word...
...In Quebec, only the island of Montreal, with its strong anglophone and immigrant minorities, and western Quebec, voted yes...
...Previous experience with a magazine, small business, or nonprofit organization is a plus...
...One French language commentator attributed Trudeau's impact to the fact that he made his case for a no vote with a point-by-point analysis of the agreement...
...It had the support of Canada's three major political parties—the Liberals, the Progressive Conservatives, and the New Democrats—associations of business leaders, the Canadian Labor Congress, most of the media in English Canada, and a large array of public figures...
...While the rejection of political elites was a major factor in English Canada (much of the discussion there concerned the defense of rights), for Quebec the referendum was about the distribution of power...
...To complicate matters further, many Canadians felt that the proposed institutions of the federal government in the new accord appeared cumbersome and unworkable...
...Please include references and salary requirement...
...When the vote came, the accord was strongly supported by Newfoundland, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island...
...Elijah Harper, an OjibwayCree member of the Manitoba legislature who had urged his constituents to abstain, put it this way after the vote: "Life goes on...
...Others regard the Mulroney government's previous attention to the economy as dubious at best...
...Judy Rebick, the fiery leftist leader of NAC, Commonweal campaigned vigorously for the no side...
...Quebec, as always, was unique...
...The campaign revealed a massive disenchantment with the political leadership of the country...
...So whither goest Canada now...
...Both the Parti Quebecois and the Reform party published annotated texts of the accord...
...The questions at issue in various parts of the country were not really the same...
...The Mulroney government, for its part, quickly announced that it would tackle the problem of Canada's sagging economy...
...It would be given specific federal powers...
...This mood was, paradoxically, reinforced by a widespread popular reaction against a heavy, slick, and well-funded advertising blitz for the yes side...
...And while the Allaire Commission's 1991 report, with its demands for exclusive Quebec jurisdiction in twenty-two different areas, had shocked many English Canadians, the fact is that well over half of those powers were already exercised by Quebec...
...She saved dissidents from having their no vote identified with either Preston Manning, leader of the right-wing Reform party, or with Jacques Parizeau of the Parti Quebecois...
...A number of them, in such areas as education, urban affairs, welfare, etc., were already under provincial jurisdiction, as was the use of civil law in Quebec, and worked very well as a practical administrative arrangement...
...Initially those tasks will focus on marketing and promotion...
...This implied, for yes supporters, that the seriously-flawed agreement was the best that could be hoped for...
...Quebec Premier Robert Bourassa of the Liberal party had accepted the Charlottetown accord and campaigned in favor of it since the alternative would have been a Quebec referendum on sovereignty...
...During the campaign, supporters of both the yes and no options urged their people to "hold their noses and vote...
...In compensation, Ontario and Quebec were to be give eighteen new, permanent parliamentary seats each...
...for the no side, it implied that progressives in English Canada would have to join forces with the Reform party, and that conservatives would have to vote with the likes of Judy Rebick and the separatist Parti Quebecois...
...REPORT FROM OTTAWA I'D SAY THAT'S A 'NO' CANADA HANGS TOGETHER wo days before Canadians went to the polls on October 26 to vote on the framework for a new constitutional agreement, Canadian newspapers and broadcasters had already begun a postmortem on the referendum...
Vol. 119 • December 1992 • No. 21