Kathleen Wynne calls federal response to TRC study 'disappointing'

mentalfloss

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Kathleen Wynne calls federal response to TRC study 'disappointing'

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne is calling the federal government's response to recommendations from a six-year study of Canada's residential schools legacy "disappointing."

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission released 94 recommendations Tuesday along with a summary of its conclusions, including its description of a "cultural genocide" and the estimated deaths of more than 6,000 children.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper did not address a ceremony that was held on Wednesday to formally close the commission's work, but he has suggested in the House of Commons that his government has already moved on addressing aboriginal concerns in the seven years since he issued an historic apology from the government of Canada.

'No possible excuse' to ignore past abuses

Wynne began her speech to the Ontario Liberal annual general meeting on Saturday by acknowledging the work of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, saying her party must work to build a better relationship with First Nations, Métis and Inuit people.

"There never really was, but there is now no possible excuse for any government to ignore the abuses of our past relationship," she said.

"We cannot with any integrity talk of a healthy, harmonious, pluralistic society until we reconcile these wrongs by forging a new relationship with the people whose ancestors were here long before most of ours."

The premier has criticized Harper in the past for not calling a national inquiry into murdered and missing aboriginal women and pressed him on the issue of clean drinking water when the two met in January.

The federal response to the commission's recommendations is "disappointing," Wynne said.

"I don't think there's any excuse for it," she said after her speech at the Liberal meeting, where delegates voted 95 per cent in favour of Wynne staying on as leader.

http://www.cbc.ca/m/news/canada/tor...response-to-trc-study-disappointing-1.3103491
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
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This lady, who holds back water, needs to concentrate on continuing to spend ON in oblivion.
 

IdRatherBeSkiing

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May 28, 2007
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I am not sure we needed a royal commission to determine that what was done was wrong. The government has already apologized formally. What else is left to be done ... accept for giving them huge sums of money in perpetuity?
 

pgs

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I am not sure we needed a royal commission to determine that what was done was wrong. The government has already apologized formally. What else is left to be done ... accept for giving them huge sums of money in perpetuity?
Well that's exactly what the chiefs and lawyers who wrote the report want .
 

Colpy

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Kathleen Wynne calls federal response to TRC study 'disappointing'

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne is calling the federal government's response to recommendations from a six-year study of Canada's residential schools legacy "disappointing."

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission released 94 recommendations Tuesday along with a summary of its conclusions, including its description of a "cultural genocide" and the estimated deaths of more than 6,000 children.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper did not address a ceremony that was held on Wednesday to formally close the commission's work, but he has suggested in the House of Commons that his government has already moved on addressing aboriginal concerns in the seven years since he issued an historic apology from the government of Canada.

'No possible excuse' to ignore past abuses

Wynne began her speech to the Ontario Liberal annual general meeting on Saturday by acknowledging the work of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, saying her party must work to build a better relationship with First Nations, Métis and Inuit people.

"There never really was, but there is now no possible excuse for any government to ignore the abuses of our past relationship," she said.

"We cannot with any integrity talk of a healthy, harmonious, pluralistic society until we reconcile these wrongs by forging a new relationship with the people whose ancestors were here long before most of ours."

The premier has criticized Harper in the past for not calling a national inquiry into murdered and missing aboriginal women and pressed him on the issue of clean drinking water when the two met in January.

The federal response to the commission's recommendations is "disappointing," Wynne said.

"I don't think there's any excuse for it," she said after her speech at the Liberal meeting, where delegates voted 95 per cent in favour of Wynne staying on as leader.

http://www.cbc.ca/m/news/canada/tor...response-to-trc-study-disappointing-1.3103491

Wynne is corrupt, and a moron.

The TRC report is insane. Do you know the recommendations? Basically, turn the nation over to the aboriginals........

Any competent leader would do his absolute best to ignore it.
 

mentalfloss

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Jun 28, 2010
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Colpy, can you point to where in the report it indicates we are supposed to turn over the entire country to aboriginals?

Obviously this report is so egregious that this recommendation should be easy for you to find.
 

captain morgan

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A Mouse Once Bit My Sister
Opening the books can mean a few different things.

Indian Affairs opening the books regarding total funding will likely land the Chiefs (some at least) in some pretty hot water when their respective communities understand what has been doled-out and what they have received.

Add-in what the gen pop thinks when those numbers are released spanning a few decades.... The winds of popular support might just shift
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Smoke signals and mirrors. Intertribal disdain would instantly kill any FN attempts at true, national self governance.
 

mentalfloss

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Stephen Maher: Harper has become positively sphinxlike staying silent on Truth and Reconciliation
National Post | Canadian News, Financial News and Opinion

The leader of the Conservative Party of Canada, always a disciplined communicator, is becoming positively sphinxlike as he heads to the election that will make or break his legacy.

Stephen Harper is increasingly declining to engage on subjects that don’t advance his electoral interests, to the point that his silences are sometimes more noteworthy than the things he says.

Harper has failed, for example, to comment on the release of the Truth and Reconciliation Report into crimes committed against aboriginals at residential schools.

Harper did not say anything at the closing ceremonies he attended at Rideau Hall. He did not hold a news conference, as most leaders would do as a matter of course when their government has received $50-million report that took six years to put together.

But this leader doesn’t do that kind of thing. The last time he held a real news conference in Ottawa was in December 2012.

Not only has he not held a news conference, he made no statement and did no interviews. He did comment during Question Period, but only by ritualistically parrying questions and attacking his opponents.

He missed an opportunity to play a helpful role in a national conversation that is taking place without him.

Harper’s silence seems especially noteworthy since Justice Murray Sinclair’s report calls for exactly the opposite: dialogue.

Many of Sinclair’s recommendations have to do with making Canadians aware of the gaps in our history books where aboriginal stories should be, asking that law schools and journalism schools, for instance, add subjects to their curriculums.

“To the commission, reconciliation is about establishing and maintaining a mutually respectful relationship between aboriginal and non-aboriginal peoples in this country,” Sinclair writes. “In order for that to happen, there has to be awareness of the past, acknowledgement of the harm that has been inflicted, atonement for the causes, and action to change behaviour.

“Too many Canadians know little or nothing about the deep historical roots of these conflicts. This lack of historical knowledge has serious consequences for First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples, and for Canada as a whole.”

Harper knows this history. He spoke movingly about it in 2008 when he apologized on behalf of the government

Harper knows this history. He spoke movingly about it in 2008 when he apologized on behalf of the government.

“You have been working on recovering from this experience for a long time and in a very real sense, we are now joining you on this journey,” he said then.

Now that the journey is ending, Harper is getting out of the car and walking off without saying a word.

He had the opportunity to say something helpful, to show leadership, as other party leaders, provincial and municipal leaders have done.

When he released his report, Sinclair said that “words are not enough” to address the legacy of suffering. But Harper has not even offered words.

After saying nothing in Ottawa, he went to the Toronto riding of Finance Minister Joe Oliver to warn television viewers about the threat from jihadi terrorists, delivering his tough lines in front of a backdrop of mute supporters and a huge flag, as he recently did in Montreal.

On Thursday, Harper took four questions. None were about the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Nor did he say anything about the OPP report this week that found the RCMP failings left the force ill-prepared for the Oct. 22 shooting.

Harper has the right to hold his tongue, to only discuss subjects that might help him in the coming election.

And the rest of us have the right to take note of his silences and carry on conversations without him.

Stephen Maher: Harper has become positively sphinxlike staying silent on Truth and Reconciliation