I Need Your Help!

by Jun 6, 201013 comments

I am about to embark on one of the most†important projects I have ever undertaken – a mission†that could have a profound impact on†the world – or fizzle.† This will depend on three things:

1. How well prepared I am, and how well I execute this mission.

2. The readiness and appetite of my audience for the message I am going to deliver.

3. Your support.

This week, I am going to Ottawa to meet with representatives of the Canadian Parliament to present a heartfelt message for Canada.† We are working on arranging†similar meetings†with Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid in the US Congress and Senate respectively.† But this first meeting is crucial.† And I know you can have a significant influence on the outcome. With your support, we can build a grassroots movement, organize a Twitter and Facebook campaign, write letters to elected officials, and let our voices be heard loud and clear in these and many other ways that you know well, and†I do not.†Please show your support for this initiative and make it plain and clear to our leaders that we are looking for change – we want to be inspired. Here†is the message I will deliver this week:

Rebuilding Canadian Confidence in Politics and Politicians

There are many reasons why Canadians are more disenchanted with politicians than at any time since polls have been measuring this question. In 1965, for example, 49% of Canadians thought that “the government does not care what the people think”. By 1979 this proportion had grown to 53%, by 1984 to 63% and by 1990 to 70%. The level of rhetoric and bombast in the media about politicians and politics has risen to match the decline of civility in Canada’s†House of Commons.

And there we may have both a definition of the problem and the solution.

Most Canadians would say today, that our political system is either broken or rapidly approaching a broken condition. A minority of the population study issues and assesses our political condition through a calm discernment of facts, knowing that we canít have everything we all want, and not without paying for it or making some trade-offs. But the majority doesnít think this way. They are looking for leadership, and they yearn foróand deserveósomething different from what they experiencing today. They watch what they perceive to be a collection of argumentative, insulting, yelling, name-calling boors behaving in ways that they would never tolerate from their children. And these are the ìleadersî they have elected to represent them in the worldóand they are ashamed and disappointed.

When we ask politicians why they behave in such a disrespectful and unproductive way, they make excuses like, ìpolitics is adversarialî, ìpoliticians are paid to opposeî, or ìthat is the way the system worksî. And when they are asked if it is effective or inspiring they acknowledge that it is not, that it is disgraceful, but that they feel powerless to change it.

But if our elected leaders canít change it, then who can? And who should? Surely this is the very group who should arrest this behavior now, so that Canada does not become governed in the same way as the Greeks or the Italians, and more recently and shockingly, the British and the Americans. (According to Rasmussen Reports, 45 percent of likely voters in the United States think a group of people selected at random from the phone book would do a better job of leading America than the current Congress). We have not reached this same critical conditionóyet.

Before we do, letís reverse the trend. This could easily be done if Canada’s House of Commons made an all-party commitment to being inspiring in every communication and action. This does not mean we have to change our views or compromise our beliefsóit just means that we make our points in ways that make people feel better, not worse; that we honor the other human being with whom we are communicating; that we are conscious of the example we are setting for 40 million Canadiansóespecially young Canadians, and that we modelóevery dayóthe behavior we wish to see in a civil society. We cannot continue to slander or libel colleagues with the impunity afforded by Parliamentary Privilege, and then put citizens in jail for doing the same thing.

The party Whips could join together to raise the bar of Parliamentary decorum and respect, setting a new standard for all levels of government in Canada and eventually the rest of the world. And Canada is the one best suited country to set this example. The example displayed by Canada as host of the 2010 Winter Olympic Games†demonstrated to the world†the country’s status as an international good neighborófamously captured in Tom Brokaw’s “Love Letter to Canada”. †This is a momentum that can be built upon.†By declaring our intentions, and then living up to these new standards, we would begin the renewal of confidence in politics and politiciansóand we would become the envy of the world. Politics could, once again, become a vocation that attracts the best and brightest of our citizens.