Pubdate: Mon, 25 May 2009 Source: Hamilton Spectator (CN ON) Copyright: 2009 The Hamilton Spectator Contact: http://www.thespec.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/181 Author: Howard Elliott Note: Editorials are written by members of the editorial board. They represent the position of the newspaper, not necessarily the individual author. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) BAD IDEA AIRED IN TORY RACE The race for the leadership of Ontario's Conservative party, rather a snore until now, just got a lot more interesting. Not one, but two of the candidates say they'd gut the province's human-rights protection agencies. Self-described dark horse Randy Hillier would get rid of both the Human Rights Commission, which looks into systemic discrimination, and the Human Rights Tribunal, which adjudicates individual complaints of discrimination. Perceived front-runner Tim Hudak would be marginally more gentle, scrapping the tribunal and reducing the commission to a public education role. No sensible source gives Hillier, who calls himself a libertarian, a chance of winning. But Niagara MPP Hudak is another matter. This part of his platform sets up a battle with his main challenger, Christine Elliott. A little perspective is called for. This isn't an election. What Hudak is trying to do is separate the Conservatives from the John Tory-led version, which the party brain trust now thinks was too Red Tory, fighting with the Liberals for space in the moderate middle. But the fact that Hudak is putting this idea front and centre in his leadership run doesn't mean it would remain there in an election campaign. His job now is to generate as much support as possible, and that means he needs the muscle of the far-right segment of the party. If and when he does win the party leadership, his job changes to trying to get the party in power. And the Conservatives are not going to get into power by gutting the agencies that protect individual rights and freedoms. Critics of the human rights protection system say it's broken and is running amok. While that's overstating it, there's no doubt there are serious problems. Consider, for example, the case of the Burlington club owner successfully prosecuted and forced to allow a patron to smoke marijuana for medical reasons in close proximity to other patrons who find the smoke and activity offensive. Situations such as this are not uncommon, and suggest there are cases where human rights apparatus is used unwisely and inappropriately. So by all means, fix the problem. Ensure the human rights protection system is objective, not ideologically driven, transparent, timely and even-handed. But killing it altogether, which is what Hudak is effectively saying, is such a bad idea it's almost funny. Ironically, Hudak seems to be forgetting that it was the Conservative administration of John Robarts that put in place measures to protect "people who are vulnerable and who lack the means to fight for their rights through the costly legal process." If Hudak really doesn't think that philosophy is as valid today as it was back in 1962 when it was introduced, he's not ready to be premier. And if he's foolish enough to make this a plank in an election platform, he'd be wise to recall what happened to his party when John Tory unwisely made public funding for faith-based private schools a key policy in the last provincial election. Ontarians know and cherish the core values that make this a great place to live and work. They won't elect someone who doesn't share those values. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake