From the CBC:
“Are we all
in this together? The political perils of pandemic travel”
COVID-19 is a
threat that requires collective action. Unfortunately, some Canadian
politicians are demonstrating how hard it can be to marshal a response to such
challenges. The good news is that almost every elected provincial and federal
figure in Canada appears to have avoided travelling outside the country during
the holidays. The bad news is that the exceptions number more than one or two;
at last count, a dozen or so of our elected representatives wantonly
disregarded official calls for Canadians to avoid unnecessary travel. And some
of those exceptions have been particularly flagrant. Ontario's finance minister
skipped off to St. Barts, the tropical island recently written up by the Daily
Mail as a pandemic refuge-of-choice for the rich and famous. Rod Phillips was
nice enough to leave behind a series of photos of himself visiting local
businesses and eating pancakes on his front porch, along with a handsomely
staged video wishing his constituents a happy holiday. But he was compelled by
public opinion to cut his trip short, and was promptly relieved of his senior
cabinet post upon returning home. In Alberta, the list of AWOL MLAs and
political staff who vacationed abroad — all from the governing United
Conservative Party — has grown by the day. But Alberta Premier Jason Kenney was
unwilling initially to punish anyone for their wandering. Only after absorbing
several days of mounting outrage did Kenney realize that firing or demoting
half a dozen members of his own team — including his own chief of staff — was
the only acceptable response. Federally, five MPs are known to have left the
country in December. Three of those MPs — the NDP's Niki Ashton and Liberals
Kamal Khera and Sameer Zuberi — did so because of family members who were sick
or who recently had passed away. Such cases can be distinguished from those who
simply wanted to go somewhere warm or different.
Do as we
say, not as we do But it still might be hard to defend such travel to any
Canadian who hasn't been able to see an ill or dying loved one — or who simply
refrained from such travel because they thought it was the responsible thing to
do. The NDP saw fit to revoke Ashton's critic portfolio and both Liberals
resigned their parliamentary secretary assignments. In the upper
chamber, Conservative Senate leader Don Plett was compelled on Monday to
acknowledge that he'd slipped off to Mexico for a few days. He'd apparently
planned to stay longer but, upon reflection, realized that his decision to
travel was unwise (Plett's period of reflection in Mexico may have coincided
with news breaking in Canada of Rod Phillips' whereabouts). The
challenge in every collective effort involving a large group is that it can be
very easy — and tempting — for any one person to opt out. And each case of
someone shirking responsibility makes it easier for others to do likewise. And
if enough people opt out, everyone suffers. Climate change is a classic
example. In fact, when it comes to the fight against global warming, various
politicians and critics have argued for years that Canadians should not feel
compelled to act until other countries (the United States or China or India or
Saudi Arabia or whatever) are prepared to do as much or more.
Collective
effort vs. private privilege COVID-19 presents a real-world example of how
shortsighted that sort of thinking is. But it's also a reminder of how easily a
collective effort — even in the presence of a very immediate danger — can fray
and fragment. Political leaders can facilitate or organize collective
efforts in at least two ways. The first way is the simplest: they can model and
promote the desired behaviour. When that isn't enough, they can implement rules
or incentives that require or promote that collective action. The
politicians who have gone astray in recent weeks obviously have trampled all
over the first approach — and those who are in government can be accused of
hypocrisy for failing to live up to the requests and warnings health officials
have been relaying to the general public. There is also some irony in the fact
that the largest number of travelling politicians seems to be associated with
an Alberta government led by a premier who likes to emphasize the importance of
personal responsibility. Public will was always going to be critical to
controlling COVID-19. No government (among the Western democracies, at least)
can hope to police the individual behaviour of millions of citizens. But
governments are still expected to do everything they can to keep the number of
infections as low as possible, and to bring the public along with that effort.
The Alberta and Ontario governments have both struggled with imposing
pandemic restrictions on the public. Their own members may have just
demonstrated that clear signals and stringent standards are necessary at this
moment. But their travelling colleagues may also have made it much harder to
implement new closures and restrictions — just at a moment when increasing
infections and a virulent new strain of the virus make dramatic action all the
more necessary.
'A very bad
example': Alberta ER doc slams politicians' international travel The travel
scandals have damaged individual and party political fortunes over the last few
weeks. Far more worrisome is the injury these footloose politicians may have
done to the public's willingness to share the burden of containing the
pandemic. At the very least, they have gifted message fodder to the
"anti-maskers" and other fringe voices who delight in opposing public
health restrictions. It might be pleaded that politicians are just like
everyone else. Just as the vast majority of Canadians generally abide by best
practices and public guidelines, so too do the vast majority of the nation's
political leaders. Some Canadians have strayed; so have some of their elected
officials. But the actions of political leaders resonate. At a moment
when leadership is incredibly important, a dozen public officeholders have
betrayed the public's expectations and trust. And that matters now not only
because of the pandemic, but because of another collective action problem: the
need to protect and reinforce democracy and the political process against
cynicism, distrust and division. Alongside climate change and COVID-19,
political dysfunction has been one of the defining challenges of the era. A
dozen Canadian politicians leaving the country — most of them for leisure — in
the midst of a global pandemic doesn't doom the collective challenge of
upholding liberal democracy. Nor will it completely undo a national effort to
combat a health crisis. But it doesn't help.
^ Pandemic Privilege
is disgusting and sadly not limited only to Canada. There should be punishments created and strictly enforced no
matter who breaks the restrictions/laws. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/pandemic-travel-kenney-plett-rod-phillips-covid-1.5861114
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.