Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Anti-terror bill and civil-liberties: a familar tug-of-war for Harper

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jan, 2015 02:36 PM

    OTTAWA — As the prime minister and his cabinet craft the latest anti-terror legislation, they'll be thrust into a familiar balancing act between civil liberties and public safety.

    Stephen Harper will also have to contend with the friction between the strong libertarian contingent in his caucus and those who support an enhanced role for government.

    There has been speculation that the bill, which Harper says will be introduced soon, will restrict speech that encourages or glorifies terrorism. Britain and France already have such controversial measures on the books.

    Harper and his cabinet have strongly condemned the attack on free speech and the press that occurred when Islamic extremists targeted France's provocative Charlie Hebdo magazine last week.

    Over the years, the Conservatives have introduced legislation and made political gestures that have spanned the spectrum from libertarian to interventionist.

    In the category of libertarian-inspired action:

    — Dismantling the long-gun registry, derided by the government as wasteful and coercive to mostly law-abiding hunters, farmers and sports shooters.

    — Axing the long-form census. The government argued the mandatory nature of the questionnaire was coercive and intrusive.

    — Removing the prohibition on the dissemination of phone and Internet hate speech from the Canadian Human Rights Act.

    — Repealing the Elections Act ban on the publication of election results before polls have closed in certain regions.

    But other measures have been much more nuanced:

    — The recently passed cyberbullying bill, delayed for years amid accusations it infringed on privacy and civil liberties, gave police more online surveillance powers.

    — Conservative Senate bill S-4, now in the Commons, would loosen certain privacy protections, giving some entities more power to use personal information without consent.

    — A Conservative private member's bill made it illegal to wear a mask during a riot or unlawful assembly.

    — The government barred British MP George Galloway from entering Canada to deliver a speech, on the grounds he was a security threat because he helped deliver aid to Gaza. Galloway later won a challenge at Federal Court and accused the Conservatives of trying to stifle debate.

    — Conservatives removed two representatives from the Canadian Immigration Forum as witnesses at a committee hearing because of their views on non-white immigration.

    Harper himself seemed to encapsulate the grey areas of civil liberties debates and his own pragmatic style in 2009, when he spoke to a Manning Centre networking conference.

    "The libertarian says, 'Let individuals exercise full freedom and take full responsibility for their actions.' The problem with this notion is that people who act irresponsibly in the name of freedom are almost never willing to take responsibility for their actions," Harper said.

    The debate around Charlie Hebdo and whether its provocative cartoons should be republished by media outlets as a statement in favour of free expression, has highlighted the range of views within the Conservative movement.

    In very general terms, many of the party's libertarians hail from the West, and from the Canadian Alliance and Reform party traditions. Quebec minister Maxime Bernier is a notable exception.

    In 2006, Harper ministers criticized the republication of a Danish newspaper's editorial cartoons of the prophet Muhammad. Then-defence minister Gordon O'Connor said he hoped religious groups across the country would know the government did not tolerate ridiculing any faith.

    Today, some Conservatives criticize the CBC and others for refusing to show some Charlie Hebdo cartoons depicting Muhammad.

    "Takes courage to publish the cartoons. Also right thing to do...," Sen. Linda Frum tweeted.

    Ontario Conservative MP Peter Kent takes issue with the suggestion that individuals or media outlets are acting cowardly if they don't publish the cartoons, calling that a simplistic view.

    The former TV broadcaster says there's often a vigorous debate on civil liberties within caucus and Harper is conscious of the diversity of viewpoints.

    "He's certainly passionate, but I think that he recognizes that across the country, as in our party, there are shades of opinion," Kent said in an interview.

    "I believe we're unanimous in defending free speech, but we just have differences of opinion on how that defence needs to or doesn't need to be demonstrated."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Government Approves Construction Of Contentious $8.8 Billion Site C Dam On The Peace River

    B.C. Government Approves Construction Of Contentious $8.8 Billion Site C Dam On The Peace River
    VICTORIA — The British Columbia government has approved its most expensive mega project with the construction of an $8.8 billion dam on the Peace River that Premier Christy Clark says marks a historic milestone that will be felt for a century.

    B.C. Government Approves Construction Of Contentious $8.8 Billion Site C Dam On The Peace River

    B.C. Court Convicts Alleged Hells Angel Of Extortion And Theft Over $5,000

    B.C. Court Convicts Alleged Hells Angel Of Extortion And Theft Over $5,000
    Neil MacKenzie of B.C.'s Criminal Justice Branch says the case against Robert Widdifield went to trial in the fall and a decision was handed down in Nanaimo, B.C., on Tuesday.

    B.C. Court Convicts Alleged Hells Angel Of Extortion And Theft Over $5,000

    Ontario man charged in alleged US$70m scheme after arriving at Pearson airport

    Ontario man charged in alleged US$70m scheme after arriving at Pearson airport
    HUNTSVILLE, Ont. — An Ontario man charged by American authorities four years ago in an alleged US$70 million Ponzi scheme has been arrested after arriving at Toronto's Pearson International airport.

    Ontario man charged in alleged US$70m scheme after arriving at Pearson airport

    Woman pleads guilty to spiriting away sheep from quarantined Ontario farm

    Woman pleads guilty to spiriting away sheep from quarantined Ontario farm
    PETERBOROUGH, Ont. — One of four people charged in the disappearance of 31 rare sheep east of Toronto has been convicted of transporting an animal under quarantine.

    Woman pleads guilty to spiriting away sheep from quarantined Ontario farm

    Harper urged to award Memorial Cross to mom of 'one-penny' soldier

    Harper urged to award Memorial Cross to mom of 'one-penny' soldier
    TORONTO — The mother of a Canadian soldier who was sent a one-penny government cheque after her son killed himself following a tour of duty in Afghanistan deserves a Memorial Cross, supporters say in a new petition.

    Harper urged to award Memorial Cross to mom of 'one-penny' soldier

    Lapsed funds mean good financial management, Treasury Board President says

    Lapsed funds mean good financial management, Treasury Board President says
    OTTAWA — Billions in federal funding left unspent each year is a sign of good financial management, says the minister who controls the government's purse strings.

    Lapsed funds mean good financial management, Treasury Board President says