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Parliamentary Work -
House of Commons

News
Flash
The Hill Times
March 5, 2007
Mark
Holland
Why are my two best friends Bains and
Alghabra hyphenated MPs?
OTTAWA—One of the things I have come to
really enjoy in Ottawa is sitting down at the end of the day
with fellow Liberal MPs Navdeep Bains and Omar Alghabra at our
hotel to talk about our day, our lives, and politics, in
general. Through these conversations, and others, I have made
two best friends.
I have often been struck in our talks by
how idealistic and passionate they are. They care profoundly
about the job they do as MPs and work hard to impact positive
change. They are both deeply loyal and are among the most
principled people I have ever met. Knowing them as I do makes
the last couple of weeks all the more difficult.
The recent debate on the renewal of the
sunset clauses to the Anti-Terrorism Act had just begun, and
like me, Omar was staunchly opposed to their extension. Unlike
me, however, his motives were questioned. Certain media outlets
speculated that Omar’s position was driven by a personal and
ideological agenda. They even went so far as to posit that
Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion's position on the sunset clauses
was a result of 'ethnic politics'—propelled by people like Omar
whose motives, they claimed, were counter to the best interests
of this country. I then realized that Omar would always be seen
by some as a hyphenated MP—a Muslim MP.
I share Omar’s deep concern for the
unequal application of the law, and his fear that the
anti-terror provisions, now expired, had gone too far because
they put our fundamental civil liberties at risk. I too am
passionate that these provisions needed to expire. On the issue
of the anti-terrorism sunset clauses, our minds were one. We
shared everything on the issue...everything except the personal
attacks that Omar endured and the aspersions cast on his
motives. No one questioned my Irish or German roots. No one
claimed my motive was anything but an interest in trying to
balance individual civil liberties and collective security. But
not so for Omar, who is Muslim—he was treated very differently.
Far worse was the treatment by the Prime
Minister and others of Navdeep Bains. I can recall speaking with
Nav about the sunset clauses—debating the risks and relative
advantages. Nav was more receptive than I to supporting the
extension of the sunset provisions—a fact that made what
followed even more disturbing.
The Vancouver Sun recently published a
news story reporting that Nav’s father-in-law was on a potential
secret list of individuals to be allegedly interviewed in the
Air India case. Nav was understandably upset and disturbed by
the story. I tried to imagine how he must feel; how I would feel
if my family had their characters challenged. Unfortunately, the
moment The Vancouver Sun published the story, the Prime
Minister’s spin machine got hold of it. In Question Period that
day, the Prime Minister implied and suggested that Nav had
influenced the Liberal Party leader to take a position against
extending the sunset clauses to protect his father-in-law. In
the following days, several members of the Conservative caucus
continued this erroneous smear.
Forget the fact that his father-in-law
hadn’t been questioned in 21 years or that the provision had
been in place for five years and had never been used. Also
forget the fact that the Prime Minister had no evidence to
support this slanderous allegation. Nav was declared to have
dark motives by the Prime Minister and by the National Post.
They insinuated that he was trying to protect his family—that
because he was Sikh, he didn’t care about Canadian security. I
was completely flummoxed.
In those ensuing days after the Prime
Minister stood in the House and attacked Nav and his
family—after several newspaper columns that perpetuated this
falsehood, I tried to imagine being in Nav’s shoes—my family
attacked and my motives questioned—all because of my ethnic and
religious background.
When Nav and Omar organize, it’s ethnic
politics; when I organize—I’m just a good organizer. When Omar
or Nav express concerns about anti-terrorism measures or foreign
policy it’s because of their ancestry or religion; when I
question it, either I’m debating hard choices or I’m caving
under the pressure of their ideological interests.
The debate on the sunset clauses reminds
me why more visible minority Canadians don’t enter politics—why
they feel cut out of the public discourse. Navdeep Bains and
Omar Alghabra, two hard-working and loyal Member of Parliament,
have become “hyphenated MPs,” not by choice but because people
like this Prime Minister and some news outlets would rather
promote a culture of fear and prejudice than engage in an honest
debate about our civil liberties and collective security.
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