Pubdate: Thu, 08 Jan 2004 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoria/timescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Les Leyne PLENTY OF ANSWERS, BUT LITTLE SUBSTANCE There's Still A Mystery About The Different Treatment Of The Two Assistants Politicians usually like to leave the impression they are savvy, in-the-know people who have a vague idea of what's going on. Unless the topic is some kind of weird, organized crime drug conspiracy that has brought police knocking on the door of the legislature armed with two search warrants. Then the more appropriate attitude is to have not the faintest clue what on Earth is happening. It's a topsy-turvy kind of approach to things, but Premier Gordon Campbell did a magnificent job on Wednesday of establishing a meaningful rapport with everyone else out there who is completely in the dark. First of all, he walked up to the microphone at his nationally televised news conference and had nothing to say. Turned out he didn't have a statement, he was only available to answer questions. Or non-answer them. "I don't know a lot more than I did on the 29th," he said at the outset. "I don't think I know very much ... I can't tell you what's involved in the search warrants ... I haven't seen the search warrants . I don't have information on what was being searched ... I don't know everything." At one point he even denied knowing that fired ministerial assistant David Basi was even a federal Liberal party big shot, which is ridiculous, since Basi has been firmly established for quite a while as one of the key people to know in the federal Liberals' B.C. operation. Not knowing Basi's track record is almost as absurd as Campbell's effort to find the good in all this: "We should recognize that we live in a country where police can do that." However uncomfortable it leaves the premier looking, this facade of decisive ignorance is actually a good thing. The alternative is to have him fully briefed and up to speed on the case, which would leave every move the government makes as it waits for this situation to clarify open to questions of exerting political interference. As Campbell said: "The last thing I want to do is to inadvertently say something that might jeopardize an investigation and have you come back to say to me: 'Because of you we just lost 20 months of investigation into a very serious matter.' " But where the premier's story of being in the dark starts to look a little suspect is in the different treatment given the two MAs whose offices were raided. Basi, in Finance Minister Gary Collins' office was fired, Bob Virk in Transportation Minister Judith Reid's office was suspended with full pay. What's the difference? Campbell stuck to the line that Collins first used: It's because Basi assisted with Collins' house leader duties, was active on a wider scale and therefore had to go. But that is wearing thin, particularly in light of the few gleanings of new information that Campbell was able to provide. He said Solicitor General Rich Coleman briefed his chief of staff, Martyn Brown, on the Sunday the raid took place. Then Brown and Campbell -- on Maui -- conferred and agreed on a course of action that involved firing Basi instantly. Whatever was said, the briefings raise curiosity. Campbell said everything that Coleman did on this case was done with the approval of the RCMP. The solicitor general, with political responsibility for the police investigation, briefed the premier's chief of staff in some fashion just prior to the government's only reaction to the story to date. It leaves the impression that they acted on more than differing job descriptions in firing one target, but not the other. Campbell also illustrated that the government is making another distinction on this case. There's "inside government" and there's "outside government." Said the premier: "The public understands the job we have to do. They also understand this is something that is outside of government that unfortunately for all of us brought the investigation into the offices of the legislature ... "This is not about government, this is about outside of government." The Campbell government may soon start leaning heavily on this distinction. Drugs, organized crime and commercial crime are "outside of government." And cabinet ministers -- who police assure everyone are not involved - -- are inside of government. But it's still the legislature that was searched. And that's as "inside of government" as you can get. Just So You Know: In defending the integrity of the police investigation, Campbell paid a back-handed sort of tribute to past governments in B.C.'s scandal-plagued history. "One of the things we've done in B.C. relatively well is that we've set up a process where these sorts of investigations can take place and where there is no political interference." Well, practice makes perfect. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin