ÐÇ¿Õ´«Ã½

Skip to main content

Tom Mulcair: Justin Trudeau is starting to apply the Macron formula

Share
SAINT-SAUVEUR, Quebec -

As Canadians enter the third year of the pandemic, our fragile health system is beginning to buckle under the weight of the unvaccinated.

People who have chosen to refuse a free, effective vaccine are getting sick in record numbers with the Omicron variant and our overcrowded hospitals are unable to cope.

As a direct consequence, Canadians with serious diseases like cancer are being denied treatment. Some will die needlessly as a result. Their numbers just won’t appear in the official statistics as victims of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Against this backdrop, two strange political statements made their way onto the front pages in the past few days.

At a news conference, federal Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos mused about obligatory vaccinations being the way of the future, while at the same time trying to say it’s his personal opinion.

Sorry, when you’re the national health minister of a country trying to get through a pandemic, you don’t get to have personal opinions on something as crucial as obliging people to get vaccinated. You’re expressing the view of the government.

Simultaneously, Erin O’Toole decided to take up the defence of the anti-vaxxers. It was surreal. O’Toole had mostly managed to sidestep the trap Prime Minister Justin Trudeau had set for him on this issue during the recent campaign. Now, he seemed determined to jump into it with both feet.

O’Toole has been walking a fine line. He wants to send a knowing wink to the anti-vax/anti-mask crowd, that’s well represented in his base and in his Caucus. He also needs to be reassuring to ordinary Canadians who’ve followed the rules throughout the pandemic, gotten vaccinated and are in no mood to mollycoddle the irresponsible.

O’Toole wants to get the conspiracy theorists back into the Conservative fold after losing a large number of them to the Anti-Vaxxer-in-Chief, Maxime Bernier. The reward for his efforts may be the loss of support amongst mainstream Conservatives who, like the vast majority of other Canadians, simply want everything possible to be done to bring this pandemic to an end.

The contrast between Trudeau’s health minister and Conservative Leader O’Toole couldn’t be sharper. It also makes it abundantly clear that politics is still playing a key role in the management of what should exclusively be a health issue.

Duclos is too smart and experienced not to know that obligatory vaccination is a non-starter. You’d have to be able to enforce it. With what resources? The Army?

Duclos was simply redrawing the ideological line in the sand with their principal opponent. His subtext: we’re willing to do everything that we can to end this thing, O’Toole would make it worse.

Premiers Jason Kenney and Scott Moe have come out forcefully against Duclos, Premiers Doug Ford and Blaine Higgs appear more nuanced but the subject was not dealt with during Monday’s premiers’ conference with Trudeau.

O’Toole seems more than happy to join that battle but his full-throated defence of the anti-vaxxers feels contrived. A counterpoint meant to draw some attention while taking a poke at Trudeau. It’s fallen terribly flat and he has a very tiny window of opportunity to re-calibrate.

There’s nothing more important for a political leader than the public’s perception of you. It’s not something you get to change with a black T-shirt. If people feel that you’re irresponsible, that their protection is not your number one concern, that sticks. O’Toole is not irresponsible. He’s just playing a reckless game and he’ll wind up paying a huge price for it in terms of his own credibility.

Appearing to say that not getting vaccinated is no big problem, is putting O’Toole at odds with 90% of the Canadian population.

Even folks who are vaccine-hesitant will usually do the right thing for their loved ones, their friends and their co-workers. If they’re not convinced it’s good for them, many accept to get vaccinated, knowing that increasing their own immunity will mean that they have less likelihood of contaminating someone else.

There is a harder core of anti-vaxxers and outright conspiracy theorists who won’t do the right thing, even if they know that could harm others. It should come as no surprise, then, that the only thing that appears to be working with people who only think about themselves, is to threaten to take something away from them.

It was a real eye-opener when Quebec Premier Francois Legault decided to bar the unvaccinated from liquor stores and marijauna dispensaries. Thousands went running for their first dose!

Although his salty choice of terms landed him in hot water, it was French President Emmanuel Macron who proposed the best approach. He said that he really wanted to tick-off the anti-vaxxers (his scatological term “emmerderâ€, literally means that he wished to cover anti-vaxxers in excrement which, if nothing else, is certainly a good way to make them stand out in a crowd!).

What Macron meant was, take away their privileges. He wasn’t talking about forced inoculation. He knows that won’t work. Macron was saying that if you want to do anything in the society that you’re part of, you’ll have to prove that you’ve done what’s necessary to protect yourself and others.

Want to wait this thing out, unvaccinated, in your basement? Go ahead. Want to go have a glass of wine at your local bistro? Forget about it, if you don’t have your vaccine passport.

Within his areas of jurisdiction, Justin Trudeau is starting to apply the Macron formula. When trucking companies started whining that they already had too few drivers and that Canada shouldn’t be checking to see if those crossing the border are vaccinated, Trudeau told them to take a hike. Get vaccinated or you and your 18-wheeled vector can stay out. Good for him!

It’s hard to believe that we’re entering our third year of the COVID-19 pandemic. Tolerance of restrictions has now been stretched as thin as the resources of our healthcare system. Governments would do well to read the mood and not hesitate to use every tool at their disposal to protect the public.

Tom Mulcair was the leader of the federal New Democratic Party of Canada between 2012 and 2017.

IN DEPTH

Opinion

opinion

opinion Don Martin: Gusher of Liberal spending won't put out the fire in this dumpster

A Hail Mary rehash of the greatest hits from the Trudeau government’s three-week travelling pony-show, the 2024 federal budget takes aim at reversing the party’s popularity plunge in the under-40 set, writes political columnist Don Martin. But will it work before the next election?

opinion

opinion Don Martin: How a beer break may have doomed the carbon tax hike

When the Liberal government chopped a planned beer excise tax hike to two per cent from 4.5 per cent and froze future increases until after the next election, says political columnist Don Martin, it almost guaranteed a similar carbon tax move in the offing.

CTVNews.ca ÐÇ¿Õ´«Ã½

Top Hezbollah commander among 12 killed in Israeli strike on Beirut

Israel killed a top Hezbollah commander and several members of the group's elite Radwan unit in an airstrike on Beirut's southern suburbs on Friday, the Israeli military and a security source in Lebanon said, sharply escalating the year-long conflict between Israel and the Iran-backed group.

Since she was a young girl growing up in Vancouver, Ginny Lam says her mom Yat Hei Law made it very clear she favoured her son William, because he was her male heir.

An Ontario man says it is 'unfair' to pay a $1,500 insurance surcharge because his four-year-old SUV is at a higher risk of being stolen.

The province's public security minister said he was "shocked" Thursday amid reports that a body believed to be that of a 14-year-old boy was found this week near a Hells Angels hideout near Quebec City.

Local Spotlight

They say a dog is a man’s best friend. In the case of Darren Cropper, from Bonfield, Ont., his three-year-old Siberian husky and golden retriever mix named Bear literally saved his life.

A growing group of brides and wedding photographers from across the province say they have been taken for tens of thousands of dollars by a Barrie, Ont. wedding photographer.

Paleontologists from the Royal B.C. Museum have uncovered "a trove of extraordinary fossils" high in the mountains of northern B.C., the museum announced Thursday.

The search for a missing ancient 28-year-old chocolate donkey ended with a tragic discovery Wednesday.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police is celebrating an important milestone in the organization's history: 50 years since the first women joined the force.

It's been a whirlwind of joyful events for a northern Ontario couple who just welcomed a baby into their family and won the $70 million Lotto Max jackpot last month.

A Good Samaritan in New Brunswick has replaced a man's stolen bottle cart so he can continue to collect cans and bottles in his Moncton neighbourhood.

David Krumholtz, known for roles like Bernard the Elf in The Santa Clause and physicist Isidor Rabi in Oppenheimer, has spent the latter part of his summer filming horror flick Altar in Winnipeg. He says Winnipeg is the most movie-savvy town he's ever been in.

Edmontonians can count themselves lucky to ever see one tiger salamander, let alone the thousands one local woman says recently descended on her childhood home.

Stay Connected