A fierce determination for redemption: vindictiveness mars a fine political chronicle.
Axworthy, Lloyd
Memoirs, 1939-1993 Brian Mulroney A Douglas Gibson Book 1089 pages,
hardcover ISBN 9780771065361
If you want to feel the full force that motivates the once high and
mighty to pen their memoirs, consider the following dialogue from the
2006 play Frost/Nixon, by English playwright Peter Morgan. In Scene 15,
David Frost receives a call from a slightly tipsy Richard Nixon to
discuss the final session in a series of television interviews scheduled
for the next day. Both men are counting on this media extravaganza to
revive their failing reputations and public standing. The exchange goes
like this:
Nixon: "If we reflect privately just for a moment ... if we
allow ourselves ... a glimpse into that shadowy place we call our soul,
isn't that why we are here now? The two of us? Looking for a way
back? Into the sun / into the limelight / back onto the winner's
podium?"
Frost: "You are. Except only one of us can win. And I shall be
your fiercest adversary. I shall come at you with everything I've
got."
Nixon: "Good for you. Because the limelight can only shine on
one of us."
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The memoirs of Brian Mulroney capture just how fierce is the
determination for redemption as expressed by the fictional Richard
Nixon. This is the former prime minister's supreme effort to recast
the judgement of Canadians who remember him through the lens of his
departure from office in a cloud of suspicion and dislike. He seeks to
present himself as a leader of vision, influence and resolve. And, to
his credit, he does a pretty good job of presenting his case, using all
the wiles and presentational skills he used so effectively during his
political career. Except he cannot control that edge of vindictiveness
toward those who crossed him, nor does he make an effort to understand
why so many Canadians ended up not trusting him. These are flaws that
seriously mar what could have been a very good chronicle of a period of
Canadian politics where significant decisions were made that altered the
course of the country. (And the jury is still out as to whether that has
been for better or for worse.)
The opening chapters of the book describing his growing up in Baie
Comeau in a working class family is a well-written Canadian version of
the Abe Lincoln log cabin story. Mulroney shows at an early age the
abilities and energy that would eventually propel him to the prime
minister's office. He was hard working, had the gift of the gab and
knew how to make good connections and alliances. His account of family
life in the hard scrabble of the north shore of Quebec is at times
touching and gives a good inkling of what would become a strong
commitment to his native province.
The same traits became finely honed as he progressed through St.
Francis Xavier University and law school at the Universite Laval and as
a young lawyer in Montreal. He was a "comer" showing an
ability to advance and adapt to meet the challenges of climbing the next
rung on the ladder. An interesting insight into his political make-up
comes when he reveals that his becoming a Conservative was not derived
from any deep ideological conviction but simply an opportunity to rise
in a party that was not already cluttered with young ambitious would-be
politicos as was the dominant Liberal party.
Mulroney's memoir demonstrates definitively that someone of
humble origins can make it in Canadian politics, but it sure helps if
you locate in Montreal. That city has been the crucible of Canadian
politics from the days of the North West Company. Its business community
understands the value of political power to advance their interests, and
for Quebeckers generally the grand game of federalism is crucial to
their cultural identity and integrity. The rest of the country,
including Toronto, still does not get the centrality of politics to
Montrealers in particular and Quebeckers in general. Mulroney became
pals with the new French-speaking business leadership, buying into their
view of how the state should be a handmaiden of the market. In his role
as a labour lawyer, especially his tenure on the Cliche Commission, he
was in touch with the then powerful and decidedly separatist-leaning
unions in Quebec. Not only did this grant him power and money to advance
his political ambitions, but it also instilled a set of predispositions
that would eventually bear fruit in his most far-reaching
initiatives--Meech Lake, free trade and the GST. In this way
Mulroney's telling of his tutelage in Quebec of the 1970s and
'80s is an informative piece of political anthropology.
The heart of his book begins with the chapter titled "The New
Prime Minister." Excitement over his massive win, expectations of
important matters of state to master and the heady whiff of high-level
international meetings give Mulroney a rush beyond imagination. His
description of becoming prime minister imparts to all political
aficionados just how intoxicating is the ascension to power. (As one of
the survivors of the Mulroney sweep, I recall the opposite reaction: the
downer of losing power and going into opposition.) It also ushers in the
determined effort by Mulroney to vindicate his record, his thesis being
that he was responsible for making highly significant decisions on the
economy, the constitution and foreign policy, and that the successor
Liberal government of Jean Chretien lived off the benefits that his
policies had set in place.
First, let's acknowledge where in fact Mulroney and his
government deserve full honours. Unquestionably, his efforts and those
of Joe Clark in leading the fight against apartheid in South Africa were
a hallmark of Canada using its diplomatic clout to advance human rights.
It is all the more notable because Mulroney had to go head to head with
Margaret Thatcher, a soul mate, much admired by Mulroney in a variety of
Commonwealth and G7 meetings. There is no doubt that this gave Canada
good standing with Africans and influence with a broader constituency of
developing countries, an investment that paid later dividends, as I saw
directly in my time in foreign affairs as we took the same stand against
the military regime in Nigeria.
I would also give good marks to Mulroney in his efforts to convince
western countries, especially the first Bush administration after the
fall of the Berlin Wall and the coming of Gorbachev, to reach out to the
Russians with substantial foreign assistance as a way of supporting the
newly released reform forces in that country.
Where Mulroney's account of his foreign policy accomplishments
strays into the realm of self-promotion with a tinge of self-delusion is
in his declarations of how his government stood up to the Reagan
administration's demand that Canada sign on to the wacky proposal
of the Strategic Defence Initiative (Star Wars). The reality is that he
was ready to acquiesce until a storm arose in Parliament that quickly
attracted the public's attention. Mulroney dismisses this
opposition as being typical of the "anti-Americanism" of the
Left in Canada, one of the standard cliches used by the Right. But he
quickly determined that the scheme was not only impractical but highly
unpopular and, thus, changed his mind. In later assessments of how his
government took an independent stance vis-a-vis Washington, he takes
full credit rather than recognizing that it was Parliament acting as the
forum for Canadian opinion that paved the way, just as it has in later
events on missile defence and Iraq where governments bowed to
parliamentary and public pressures.
This example of being indifferent and at times churlish about the
workings of parliamentary democracy and the power of grassroots
Canadians becomes most evident in his monumental and perpetual striving
for constitutional change summed up in the words "Meech Lake."
Mulroney believed deeply in the prevailing view of the Quebec
establishment that the Trudeau government's 1982 repatriation of
the constitution and Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms was a serious
breach of the deal between the "two" founding parties to
Confederation and needed to be rectified. Like Ahab's chase of Moby
Dick, this became his quest. And his account of the endless meetings,
the rallying of provincial premiers, and the disappointment and
frustrations make for a saga of epic proportions. There is no doubt that
Mulroney believed that this was a crucial step in the preservation of
the country and that he was in a unique position to bridge the divides.
But then he goes and spoils it all by his vitriol against Pierre
Trudeau, Jean Chretien, Clyde Wells and others. In Mulroney's eyes,
Trudeau was Darth Vader who destroyed his efforts at constitutional
reconciliation, and he spews invective in what must be one of the most
intemperate attacks of one high-placed political figure upon another in
Canadian annals. This is the black side of Brian Mulroney.
What he fails to comprehend is that Trudeau by himself could not
turn that tide. There were a lot of Canadians outside of Quebec who
genuinely felt that Meech would fragment the country and turn the
federal government into a eunuch unable to govern in a way that would
promote social and economic equity. Trudeau simply gave voice to these
worries.
Mulroney was right in his search to provide Quebec with the
symbolic assurances of its special place in Confederation. But he
misread the mood in other parts of Canada, assuming that deal making
behind doors was the only prerequisite. It is instructive that in his
rueful way Mulroney reports that on the eve of the 1993 referendum on
the Charlottetown accord he went to bed with full confidence that it
would pass, only to discover the next day that a majority of Canadians
in a majority of provinces voted against.
The same misreading can be detected in his account of another
signature decision by his government, the free trade agreement with the
United States, then Mexico. In the 1984 election Mulroney stated
unequivocally that he was against free trade. Shortly thereafter he
authorized the beginnings of negotiations with seeming little concern
for his flip-flop. He then found himself caught up in the political
necessity to reach a deal, any deal. While professing that the primary
purpose of free trade was to give Canada a safeguard against American
protectionism by having an effective dispute resolution mechanism, he,
Michael Wilson and his chief of staff, Derek Burney, ended up signing
onto a deal that allowed national trade law to prevail. Those who follow
the sad story of softwood lumber disputes know just how ineffective the
dispute resolution mechanism has turned out to be.
Here was a chance for Mulroney to reflect, but he does not. In
particular, he does not examine the increasing diminution of high-value
manufacturing jobs, the low productivity rates caused by miniscule private sector research, Canada's inability to arrive at an energy
policy that supports a friendly climate change strategy, especially on
oil sands development, and a looming crisis in freshwater supplies-all
affected by the restraints on Canadian decision making imposed by the
free trade deal. Mulroney takes justifiable pride in his environmental
record, but the free trade arrangement may yet prove to be the undoing
of Canada's effort to achieve effective environmental policies.
This is a legacy that I believe Mulroney himself would decry. And
it is one that could have been avoided if he had listened more carefully
to Canadians. His skills as a shrewd deal maker who can bring different
points of view together failed him on a grand scale.
The public began to turn on Mulroney and the last sections of his
book deal with his time of discontent and increasing dissension in the
ranks. It was the introduction of the GST that became the boil that
burst into widespread dissatisfaction. The Department of Finance pitched
it to the prime minister as a more effective consumption tax than the
old manufacturers levy and held out promise of substantially increased
revenues. But being the Finance Department and therefore seized by the
orthodoxy of limiting government expenditures, it did not balance it
with any proposed addition in social or health investments, arguing that
this would be unwise during a time when a worldwide recession was
underway. What is exasperating is that the orthodoxy still pertains and
the decade of annual surpluses in the billions of dollars goes to tax
reduction and debt write-downs, not to improving the quality of life of
Canadians. There are still more than a million Canadian children living
in poverty a decade and a half after a parliamentary declaration to end
their plight.
A very telling excerpt in the book is drawn from Mulroney's
diary where he writes about Joe Clark's disillusionment and threat
to resign: "The problem really is that Joe and some others are
concerned by the emergence of an apparently one-dimensional agenda of
the government, one seemingly focused on the economy to the exclusion of
all other socially progressive matters." What remains a mystery
that Mulroney never explains is why the working class boy from Baie
Comeau who grew up to be a prime minister with a yen for grand designs
and structural changes would ignore this advice from a senior minister
and do nothing to improve the position of ordinary Canadians. Maybe by
this time he was too tired from his constitutional sorties, or maybe by
this time he had just lost interest in domestic issues. It is
instructive that in the latter part of the book the pages fill with
accounts of state dinners, weekends with Bushes, G7 summits,
tete-a-tetes with world leaders, nary a word about meetings with fellow
Canadians in Prince Rupert, Weyburn or Cornerbook.
But the truth might just be that by that time Mulroney had become
captive to the prevailing conventional anti-public sector bias of the
times ushered in by the Thatcher/Reagan governments and broadly
supported by the business community and the Ottawa mandarins. In fact,
Mulroney proudly boasts that he "cut spending and the size of
government more deeply than Ronald Reagan and privatized and deregulated
more swiftly than Margaret Thatcher."
This may be the most problematic of his legacies when one considers
today the burgeoning deficit in infrastructure, the paucity of resources
for education, the stinginess of our foreign assistance, the deep
poverty of our aboriginal people and the increasing income gap between
wealthy Canadians and those in the middle and lower income groups. A
legacy that was not, I am sad to say, greatly altered by the successor
government of which I was a part.
This is a memoir worthy of the time it takes to read. It is a
sprawling panorama of a fascinating time in the recent history of the
country told in a personal, pungent style. While Brian Mulroney takes
many liberties in the telling of the story--including a memory lapse on
his entanglements with Karl-Heinz Schreiber--and erodes its value by his
pit bull attacks, he does add to our understanding of where we have
been, which can give better insight as to where we should go. That is
what a good political memoir ought to do. It is just too bad that he
does not tell the whole story. As recent newspaper accounts reveal, he
needs to add another chapter if he truly wants to be redeemed.
The Honourable Lloyd Axworthy is president and vice-chancellor of
the University of Winnipeg.