3 strikes and you're outed: Brian Pallister makes another inflammatory comment about Indigenous relations - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:03 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
ManitobaAnalysis

3 strikes and you're outed: Brian Pallister makes another inflammatory comment about Indigenous relations

Pallisteris doubling down on his sunny take on colonial history, much the same way hetripled and quadrupleddown on claims his government did everything it couldto prevent the second and third waves of COVID-19.

Brian Pallister's latest gaffe and reluctance to acknowledge it further illustrates his unusual leadership

Premier Brian Pallister followed up his 'race war' and back-of-the-vaccine-line comments with a claim colonialism played out with the best of intentions. (Gary Solilak/CBC)

During five years as Manitoba's premier, Brian Pallister has made a trio of statements his critics can fairly describeas impediments to reconciliation.

Speaking in Virden in 2017, Pallister characterized divisions between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people over illegal night hunting as the makings of"a race war."

He later walked back those commentsas "the wrong choice of words," butdid notapologize for them.

Late in 2020, the premier suggested the need to prioritize the Indigenous population for COVID-19 vaccinations "puts Manitobans at the back of the line" for doses if the province does not receive a greater proportional share of shots.

The implication, as Sen. Murray Sinclair noted, was Indigenous people are not Manitobans.

In spite of that rhetoric, theprovince went on to partner with the First Nations Pandemic Response Team on what is widely regarded as a successful effort to ensure vaccines made their way to Indigenous communities.

The third statement arrived on Wednesday, when the premier issued a plea to Manitobanswho remain angry aboutthe discovery of the remains of hundreds of childrenat several Canadian residential schools.

During a speech intended to calmthe waters,Pallisterinstead whipped up a storm bysuggesting the colonization of Canada was conducted with good intentions.

"The people who came here to this country before it was a country, and since, didn't come here to destroy anything," the premier said."They came here to build."

This comment has beencharacterized as ahistorical and insensitive by Indigenous and non-Indigenous scholars alike.

Thatis not hyperbole. For starters, nations existed in what's now Manitoba before 1619, when Jens Munck'screw of hapless Hudson Bay sailors became the first Europeans to set foot on what would eventually becomethis province.

More significantly, the colonization of this continentdid involve deliberate efforts to destroy Indigenous people.

In 2017, Pallister said night hunting by Indigenous men is becoming a 'race war.' (Submitted by the Manitoba Wildlife Federation)

As more Canadians are aware than ever, residential schools were created with the stated intention of eradicating Indigenous languages and erasing Indigenous cultures as part of an effort to assimilatethe people who lived here centuries and millennia before the first trans-Atlantic voyages.

Nonetheless, the premier bristlesat any suggestion his latest comments were offensive.

On Friday, his office claimed criticsmisrepresentedthe premier's statement and insisted Pallister has spent his career attempting to improve the lives of Indigenous people.

In other words, Pallisteris doubling down on his sunny take on colonial history, much the same way hetripled and quadrupleddown on claims his government did everything it couldto prevent the second-wave of COVID-19 from decimating personal care homes and the third wave from overwhelming intensive care wards.

"When you're premier andyou're wanting to hold on to power for your party moving forward, and you knowyou've been experiencing somedrops in the polls and maybe somecallsfor your resignation, you would think youwould be a little bit more sensitive and tuned in to walking a more careful path," said Kelly Saunders, a Brandon University political scientist.

"These were not politically smart comments for him to make, even if he thought it, even if he deeply holds these beliefs. It's one thing to think it;It's another thing to say it."

In 2020, Pallister said Manitoba's need to prioritize vaccinating its large Indigenous population against COVID-19 'puts Manitobans at the back of the line' for vaccines. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)

The drops in the polls for Manitoba's Progressive Conservativesare demonstrable. They're also reversible, if a new and perhaps more compassionate-soundingPCleader replaces Pallister some time between now and the next provincial election.

There is no obvious candidate within the PC caucusto step into that role. If cabinet ministers Cameron Friesenand Heather Stefanson still have leadership ambitions, they would be vulnerable to election-time attacks due to their respective roles as health ministers during Manitoba's disastrous efforts to manage the pandemic's second and third waves.

There isn't even an obvious candidate to serve as an interim leader for Tory MLAs to temporarily rally behind if Pallister does depart early. Committing regicide isn't easy, as the NDP demonstrated so dramatically during the failed effort to usher Greg Selinger out of office in 2015.

Publicly, no PC MLA has uttered a negative peep about either Pallister's pandemic performance or his comments this week.

Some may not be running again. Others mayvalueparty loyalty. Yet others may be afraid to stick out their necks.

"I would have expected to see perhapsan individual or two maybe beginning to distance themselves," Saunders said."It hasn't happened yet."

The nature of Pallister's leadership is also a factor. The premier tends to speak for his entire government and only occasionally provides his cabinet ministers the latitude to opine on policy issues. Other MLAs are sometimes seen but rarely heard.

"In the first few years of his time as premier, being a bit of a one-man show was in some ways a benefit. He had clear ideas of his own. He was on his own track. Hedid pretty aggressive things," said Mary Agnes Welch, a principal at Winnipeg polling firm Probe Research.

"I think these days when we are in the midst of a crisis that requires a lot of input, a real understanding of how Manitobans feel and what their behaviours are, now is the time when a good leader needs to listen and take into account all of those views."

It is unclear how many people this premier turns to for advice. Assuming someonevetted his speech on Wednesday, it's also fair to ask whether he listens to it.