I had the honour of bestowing the highest rank of the Order of Canada on Mr. Smallwood at Government House in St. John's during my tenure as lieutenant-governor in 1987.Of course, said J.A. McGrath was probably too busy, six years earlier, to have read Barbara Yaffe’s report in the February 9th edition of the — huckthoo — Toronto Globe and Mail:
So lambasted in some quarters has Mr. Smallwood been that the 80-year-o ld politician apparently has felt a need to redeem himself. To that end he has written, among others, two books (both published in 1979): The Time Has Come to Tell and No Apology From Me.But hey, if nothing else, today’s letter by J.A. McGrath confirms the identity of a previous, equally fact-challenged epistlist also named J.A. McGrath, who wrote to complain that
[…]
([The Time Has Come to Tell], by the way, contains some great gossip, revealing Mr. Smallwood's intense dislike of John Crosbie; his belief that Mr. Peckford is a true Grit in Tory togs; his belief that Pierre Trudeau has retreated from Liberal principles; and his repeated refusal to accept both a Senate seat and an Order of Canada commendation.) In No Apology From Me, Mr. Smallwood thumbs his nose at those anti-Confederates still a'cursing over affiliation with the mainland foreigners.
We have never had a judge on the highest court in the land in the 60 years that we have been a constituent part of the federation.Yes, that J.A. McGrath who was a PC government MP in 1985 when Gérard La Forest, a — huckthoo — New Brunswicker, was named to the Supreme Court of Canada in the place of the long-serving notionally “Atlantic” justice, Ritchie of — huckthoo — Nova Scotia — also appointed while said J.A. McGrath was a PC government MP.
Between them, Ritchie and La Forest JJ. occupied 37 of those 60 years on the Supreme Court of Canada.
According to Wikipedia, former Premier of Newfoundland Joey Smallwood first declined appointment as a Companion because he felt that, as a Father of Confederation, he deserved a knighthood. Smallwood was never knighted and he later settled for induction as a Companion.
ReplyDeleteDoes a modern, socialist democracy like ours really need the elitism of a system of "honours" like the order of Canada ?
To paraphrase Marx, I wouldn't join any club that would have me as a member.