Did Tom Mulcair need to apologize for his past 'Newfie' remark? - Action News
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Did Tom Mulcair need to apologize for his past 'Newfie' remark?

Tom Mulcair was forced to "unreservedly apologize" in Newfoundland on Sunday for comments he made in 1996 that the Liberal Party says equated the word "Newfie" with "stupid." But a close reading of the context suggests that may not have been his intended meaning. So, why apologize?

In politics, history can be the most dangerous minefield of all

Mulcair apologizes for using the term "Newfie"

9 years ago
Duration 0:44
NDP Leader Tom Mulcair apologizes for using the term "Newfie" - in the past - to describe Newfoundlanders.

Tom Mulcair got a nasty surprise in Newfoundland on Sunday, when he flew in to boostSt. John'sSouth-Mount Pearl candidate Ryan Cleary. A nearly 20-year-old exchange in Quebec's National Assembly, where he used the word "Newfie," came back to haunt him.

Liberal candidate Nick Whalen suggested that the term had been used as a synonym for "stupid."

Mulcair was arguing with Parti Qubcois members over the fairness ofholding referendums until they get the result they want. He criticized "the separatists who hold two referendums in a row, who say 'that doesn't count, but when we win, then it will count.'"

A PQ member said the process was no different than the 1948 referendumsby which Newfoundland joined Canada.

"It's true that it's prettyNewfie, your business. You're correct to say it like that," Mulcair shot back.

Stupid peopleor dishonest process?

So, did Mulcair mean it was "stupid,"as has been alleged? Not everyone heard it the same way as the Liberal candidate.

"Perhaps Mulcair was not being pejorative per se," wrote Colby Cosh in the National Post.

"The exact import of this exchange might be lost on Canadians in places where there is no longer a folk memory of the 1948 referendums which united the Dominion of Newfoundland with its larger neighbour."

Indeed, the context makes clear that Mulcair was not saying the PQ's referendum approach was unintelligent, but rather that it was dishonest and gamed to produce a certain result.

"Newfoundlanders let themselves be procedurally swindled in 1948, the old-model Mulcair seems to have been saying," wrote Cosh.

Many Newfoundlanders would agree that is a fair description of what happened to them.

Like the PQ in Quebec,the British Colonial Officealso held two referendumsinNewfoundland. Although an elected National Convention had voted 29-16 not to put Confederation with Canada on the ballot, they were overruled by the British government.

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair fishes for cod with MPs Ryan Cleary, left, and Jack Harris, right, in Petty Harbour, N.L., during a campaign stop on Sept. 20. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)

The cause of Confederation was defeated in the first vote, 45per cent to41per cent. But Britain's Whitehall mandarins, who designed the process in consultation with Joey Smallwood and the Canadian government, were determined to achieve the result they wanted.

A second referendum was held. Most Newfoundlanders went to bed thinking independence had prevailed. The next day, the British government announced that 52 per centof Newfoundlanders had voted to join Canada, and the British returning officers who had been sent out to conduct the referendum promptly burned the ballots in a hospital incinerator.

For most mainland Canadians, Confederation with Newfoundland is assumed to have been a happy event for which Newfoundlanders are grateful.

Few Canadians today know that the referendum in Newfoundland was a bitterly sectarian affair, with most Catholics and the entire Catholic hierarchybacking independenceand most Protestants (and the Orange Order)opposed.

Few are aware that polls at the time showed that a largemajority of Newfoundlanders of both persuasions preferred joining the United States, where almost every Newfoundlander had family members. (The pro-U.S. party was led by the father of JohnCrosbie.) But Winston Churchill was determined to keep Newfoundland in the Empire, and joining the U.S. was never an option on any ballot.

Newfoundland formally became part of Canada on April 1, 1949. My grandfather told his childrenat the dinner table: "This is a black day."Today, most Newfoundlanders are reconciled to the outcome, and many count themselves as proud Canadians. Butthe pain of Newfoundland's demotion from nation to province lingers.

'Anger and disgust'

Former premier Brian Peckford in his book The Past in the Presentdescribed his feelings towardBritain and Canada over the affair as a mix of "anger and disgust."

The bestselling non-fiction bookof recent years in Newfoundland has been Greg Malone'sDon't Tell the Newfoundlanders."We went from being an international hub to a Canadian backwater overnight," wrote Malone inan angry and well-researched retelling of the whole sordid story.

For many, the book reopened the old wound. Rick Mercer wrote on the cover: "Malone uncovers threads that when pulled together could lead to the unravelling of our entire confederation. Reads like fictionbut, sadly, is the shocking truth".

The bitter pill of the loss of nationhood was not made easier to swallow by condescending Newfie jokes and stereotypes.That's why in 2008, Premier Danny Williams marked Newfoundland's arrival as a "have" province by announcing "the days of the Newfie joke are over."

Why say sorry?

So, if Mulcair wasn't calling Newfoundlanders stupid, why not explain what he really meant, instead of "apologizing unreservedly" and allowing himself to be portrayed as another condescending mainlander?

A lawn sign supports NDP candidate Ryan Cleary in Petty Harbour. In the background, the pink, white and green tricolour known locally as the Republic of Newfoundland flag.
Mulcair as that 1996 exchange with the PQ shows has always been a staunch opponent of Quebec separation. But his promise to repeal the Clarity Act has left him vulnerable on the national unity issue.

Moreover, the candidate he came to support in Newfoundland has a track record of supporting Newfoundland independence.

Just months beforeCleary first ran for the NDP in 2008, he wrote in his newspaper the Independent: "Now that we're rolling in the cash, it may be time to consider breaking away from the country of Canada. If we're teetering on the edge of economic independence, why not go all the way?"

In a live debateTuesdaynight on CBC Radio, after telling hisLiberal opponent,SeamusO'Regan, "I'm not going to question your patriotism," Cleary couldn't resista shot at hisrival, who returned to Newfoundland last year after 15 years away and is running in St. John'sSouth-Mount Pearl.

"Are you representing Ottawa in Newfoundland and Labradoror Newfoundland and Labrador in Ottawa?" Cleary said.

"What areyour priorities, Seamus? Jeez b'y, you spent too many years on the mainland."

Those comments don't hurtCleary in his own riding. As Mulcair must have observed when he visited Petty Harbour on Sunday to go jigging for cod, the flag most flown there is neither the Maple Leaf nor the Union Jack-themed official flag of the province, but the pink-white-and-green tricolour known locally as the Republic of Newfoundlandflag. In fact, Mulcair drove past entire buildings painted with those colours.

But those sentiments don't play very well in mainland Canada.

So perhaps this really was just a heedless insult fired from the hip and all of this history was the furthest thing from Mulcair's mind.

Or perhaps Mulcair faced a choice: apologize for an insult he never intended and hope Newfoundlanders forgive him, or appear soft on national unityand remind Canadians that their nation's Confederation with Newfoundland was not quite the happy marriage many think it was.

In the end, there's only one riding in play for the New Democrats in Newfoundland and Labrador, and about 160 in mainland Canada. So, the choice may not have been that hard, after all.