>The political damage has become so severe in British Columbia that federal Conservatives are now using DRIPA and Cowichan to attack Prime Minister Mark Carney in Ottawa.
Carney last week broke his silence on the case to say he “fundamentally disagrees” with the B.C. Supreme Court ruling last August that found Aboriginal title is a senior right to fee-simple private property.
He faced more questions Tuesday, when the Opposition highlighted the federal government’s refusal to argue a longstanding policy that private property rights extinguish all prior title claims (including Aboriginal title) in the Cowichan Nation court case last year.
“This Liberal government instructed its lawyers not to defend property rights in the Cowichan case, with a litigation directive, number 14, that said that in fact those titles did not take priority,” Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said during question period.
Humble-Post-7672 on
This is going to end up being a two steps forward, 50 steps back situation. It’s going to end badly and reconciliation may never recover.
MicrosoftPaintRules on
The BC provincial and Federal government don’t want to develop anything outside of their narrow scope of ideologically compatible ventures.
They’ve set the First Nations up to be the scapegoat.
Edit: I think I’ve cracked the code! I’ve managed to upset both racists and government cultists. This is a great place to be.
Strict_DM_62 on
I maintain that our current relationship and framework with indigenous communities is the single biggest drag on our economy alongside the housing crisis and internal trade barriers.
The fact is, the system is rife with uncertainty from top to bottom if you need to get anything big built as part of an investment; a unique risk to Canada. If you were a business, and all other things being equal, you’d absolutely avoid Canada because there’s a sub-national group, with extreme and undefined powers to slow and halt projects, with minimal clear structure and authority, who’s borders of their authority aren’t clear, demands are fractured (even internally), who are willing to block/fight one another, and often cling to the legal ambiguity that they currently exist in.
It’s that legal ambiguity that kills investment. I’m actually a huge supporter of officially recognizing more indigenous governance; because it creates official, defined borders and authorities; exactly what we need for certainty and clarity.
vancity31240 on
What use is the major projects plan when you have dripa legislation holding it hostage. BC NDP needs to repeal dripa immediately.
Other provinces take notice and don’t pass dripa legislation.
I_am_always_here on
My understanding is that Premier Eby wanted to repeal DRIPA but that his own NDP caucus, and the few Greens, wouldn’t support it.
And the B.C. Conservatives are refusing to vote for an NDP bill to repeal DRIPA because whenever a headline such as “Businesses pulling investment from B.C. over DRIPA uncertainty” shows up they rise in the polls. Or Eby will at least likely lose his party leadership if there is the absurd result of the Conservatives voting with him, but not his own caucus.
And Eby risks triggering an election if he holds a vote to repeal DRIPA and it is defeated by his own caucus and the Conservatives voting against it as well for their own political motives.
Eby has taken the path of crafting a new bill supported by First Nations, that will then have the support of his caucus. This appears not to be going well, or at least speedily, although it would seem to be the best political solution.
So, why can’t the B.C. Government hold an open, non-party, vote on repeal of DRIPA? Is that even technically possible?
6 Comments
>The political damage has become so severe in British Columbia that federal Conservatives are now using DRIPA and Cowichan to attack Prime Minister Mark Carney in Ottawa.
Carney last week broke his silence on the case to say he “fundamentally disagrees” with the B.C. Supreme Court ruling last August that found Aboriginal title is a senior right to fee-simple private property.
He faced more questions Tuesday, when the Opposition highlighted the federal government’s refusal to argue a longstanding policy that private property rights extinguish all prior title claims (including Aboriginal title) in the Cowichan Nation court case last year.
“This Liberal government instructed its lawyers not to defend property rights in the Cowichan case, with a litigation directive, number 14, that said that in fact those titles did not take priority,” Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said during question period.
This is going to end up being a two steps forward, 50 steps back situation. It’s going to end badly and reconciliation may never recover.
The BC provincial and Federal government don’t want to develop anything outside of their narrow scope of ideologically compatible ventures.
They’ve set the First Nations up to be the scapegoat.
Edit: I think I’ve cracked the code! I’ve managed to upset both racists and government cultists. This is a great place to be.
I maintain that our current relationship and framework with indigenous communities is the single biggest drag on our economy alongside the housing crisis and internal trade barriers.
The fact is, the system is rife with uncertainty from top to bottom if you need to get anything big built as part of an investment; a unique risk to Canada. If you were a business, and all other things being equal, you’d absolutely avoid Canada because there’s a sub-national group, with extreme and undefined powers to slow and halt projects, with minimal clear structure and authority, who’s borders of their authority aren’t clear, demands are fractured (even internally), who are willing to block/fight one another, and often cling to the legal ambiguity that they currently exist in.
It’s that legal ambiguity that kills investment. I’m actually a huge supporter of officially recognizing more indigenous governance; because it creates official, defined borders and authorities; exactly what we need for certainty and clarity.
What use is the major projects plan when you have dripa legislation holding it hostage. BC NDP needs to repeal dripa immediately.
Other provinces take notice and don’t pass dripa legislation.
My understanding is that Premier Eby wanted to repeal DRIPA but that his own NDP caucus, and the few Greens, wouldn’t support it.
And the B.C. Conservatives are refusing to vote for an NDP bill to repeal DRIPA because whenever a headline such as “Businesses pulling investment from B.C. over DRIPA uncertainty” shows up they rise in the polls. Or Eby will at least likely lose his party leadership if there is the absurd result of the Conservatives voting with him, but not his own caucus.
And Eby risks triggering an election if he holds a vote to repeal DRIPA and it is defeated by his own caucus and the Conservatives voting against it as well for their own political motives.
Eby has taken the path of crafting a new bill supported by First Nations, that will then have the support of his caucus. This appears not to be going well, or at least speedily, although it would seem to be the best political solution.
So, why can’t the B.C. Government hold an open, non-party, vote on repeal of DRIPA? Is that even technically possible?