In one of Lord Elgin's letters we are told that,
when he had as visitors
to government house in 1850, Sir Henry Bulwer, the elder brother of Lord Lytton, and British minister to
the United States, as
well as Sir Edmund Head, his successor in the governorship of Canada, he availed himself of so favourable an opportunity
of reassuring them on
many points of the internal policy of the province on which they were previously doubtful, and gave them some
insight into the position of men and things on which Englishmen in those
days were too ignorant
as a rule. One important point which he impressed upon them--as he hoped successfully--was this:
"That the faithful carrying
out of the principles of constitutional government is a departure from the
American model, not an
approximation to it, and, therefore, a departure from republicanism in its only workable
shape."
The fact was: "The American system is our old
colonial system, with,
in certain cases, the principle of popular election substituted for that of nomination by the Crown." He was convinced
"that the concession of
constitutional government has a tendency to draw the colonists" towards England and not towards
republicanism; "firstly, because it slakes that thirst for self-government
which seizes on all
British communities when they approach maturity; and secondly because it habituates the colonists to the working of a
political mechanism
which is both intrinsically superior to that of the Americans, and more unlike it than our old colonial system." In
short, he felt very
strongly that "when a people have been once thoroughly accustomed to the working of such a parliamentary system as ours
they never will consent
to resort to this irresponsible mechanism."
Since these significant words
were written half a century ago, Canadians have been steadily working out the
principles of
parliamentary government as understood and explained by Lord Elgin, and have had abundant opportunities of contrasting
their experiences with
those of their neighbours under a system in many respects the very reverse of that which has enabled Canada to
attain so large a
measure of political freedom and build up such prosperous communities to the north of the republic, while still
remaining in the closest possible touch with the imperial state. I propose
now to close this book
with some comparisons between the respective systems of the two countries, and to show that in this respect as in
others Lord Elgin proved
how deep was his insight into the working of political institutions, and how thoroughly he had mastered
the problem of the best
methods of administering the government of a great colonial dependency, not solely with a regard to its own
domestic interests but
with a view of maintaining the connection with the British Crown, of which he was so discreet and able a servant.
It is especially important to
Canadians to study the development of the institutions of the United States, with the
view of deriving benefit
from their useful experiences, and avoiding the defects that have grown up under their system. All institutions
are more or less on
trial in a country like Canada, which is working out great problems of political science under decided advantages, since
the ground is relatively
new, and the people have before them all the experiences of the world, especially of England and the United
States, in whose systems
Canadians have naturally the deepest interest. The history of responsible government affords another
illustration of a truth which stands out clear in the history of nations, that
those constitutions
which are of a flexible character, the natural growth of the experiences of centuries, and which have been
created by the
necessities and conditions of the times, possess the elements of real stability, and best ensure the prosperity of a
people. The great source
of the strength of the institutions of the United States lies in the fact that they have worked out their
government in accordance with certain principles, which are essentially
English in their origin,
and have been naturally developed since their foundation as colonial settlements, and whatever weaknesses
their system shows have
chiefly arisen from new methods, and from the rigidity of their constitutional rules of law, which separate too
sharply the executive
and the legislative branches of government. Like their neighbours the Canadian people have based their system on English
principles, but they
have at the same time been able to keep pace with the progress of the unwritten constitution of England, to adapt it
to their own political
conditions, and to bring the executive and legislative authorities to assist and harmonize with one
another.
Each country has its "cabinet council," but the
one is essentially
different from the other in its character and functions. This term, the historical student will remember, was first
used in the days of the
Stuarts as one of derision and obloquy. It was frequently called "junto" or "cabal," and during the days of
conflict between the
commons and the king it was regarded with great disfavour by the parliament of England. Its unpopularity arose from
the fact that it did not
consist of men in whom parliament had confidence, and its proceedings were conducted with so much secrecy
that it was impossible
to decide upon whom to fix responsibility for any obnoxious measure. When the constitution of England was brought back
to its original
principles, and harmony was restored between the Crown and the parliament, the cabinet became no longer a term of
reproach, but a position
therein was regarded as the highest honour in the country, and was associated with the efficient
administration of public affairs, since it meant a body of men responsible
to parliament for every
act of government.[29] The old executive councils of Canada were obnoxious to the people for the same reason that
the councils of the
Stuarts, and even of George III, with the exception of the regime of the two Pitts, became unpopular. Not only do we in
Canada, in accordance
with our desire to perpetuate the names of English institutions use the name "cabinet" which was
applied to an
institution that gradually grew out of the old privy council of England, but we have even incorporated in our
fundamental law the
older name of "privy council," which itself sprang from the original "permanent" or "continual" council of the Norman
kings. Following English
precedent, the Canadian cabinet or ministry is formed out of the privy councillors, chosen under the law by the
governor-general, and
when they retire from office they still retain the purely honorary distinction. In the United States the use of the
term "cabinet" has none
of the significance it has with us, and if it can be compared at all to any English institutions it might be to the
old cabinets who
acknowledged responsibility to the king, and were only so many heads of departments in the king's government. As a
matter of fact the
comparison would be closer if we said that the administration resembles the cabinets of the old French kings, or
to quote Professor
Bryce, "the group of ministers who surround the Czar or the Sultan, or who executed the bidding of a Roman emperor like
Constantine or
Justinian." Such ministers like the old executive councils of Canada, "are severally responsible to their master, and
are severally called in
to counsel him, but they have not necessarily any relations with one another, nor any duty or collective action."
Not only is the
administration conducted on the principle of responsibility to the president alone, in this respect the English king
in old irresponsible
days, but the legislative department is itself constructed after the English model as it existed a century ago, and a
general system of
government is established, lacking in that unity and elasticity which are essential to its effective working. On the
other hand the Canadian
cabinet is the cabinet of the English system of modern times and is formed so as to work in harmony with the
legislative department, which is a copy, so far as possible, of the English
legislature.
The special advantages of the Canadian or English
system of parliamentary
government, compared with congressional government, may be briefly summed up as follows:--
(1) The governor-general, his
cabinet, and the popular branch of the legislature are governed in Canada, as in England,
by a system of rules,
conventions and understandings which enable them to work in harmony with one another. The Crown, the cabinet,
the legislature, and the
people, have respectively certain rights and powers which, when properly and constitutionally brought into
operation, give strength and elasticity to our system of government.
Dismissal of a ministry by the Crown under conditions of gravity, or
resignation of a ministry defeated in the popular House, bring into play the
prerogatives of the
Crown. In all cases there must be a ministry to advise the Crown, assume responsibility for its acts, and obtain the
support of the people
and their representatives in parliament. As a last resort to bring into harmony the people, the legislature,
and the Crown, there is
the exercise of the supreme prerogative of dissolution. A governor, acting always under the advice of responsible
ministers, may, at any
time, generally speaking, grant an appeal to the people to test their opinion on vital public questions and bring the
legislature into accord
with the public mind. In short, the fundamental principle of popular sovereignty lies at the very basis of the
Canadian system.
On the other hand, in the United States, the
president and his cabinet may be in constant conflict with the two Houses of
Congress during the four
years of his term of office. His cabinet has no direct influence with the legislative bodies, inasmuch as they have
no seats therein. The
political complexion of Congress does not affect their tenure of office, since they depend only on the favour and
approval of the
executive; dissolution, which is the safety valve of the English or Canadian system--"in its essence an appeal from
the legal to the
political sovereign"--is not practicable under the United States constitution. In a political crisis the
constitution provides no adequate solution of the difficulty during the
presidential term. In
this respect the people of the United States are not sovereign as they are in Canada under the conditions just briefly
stated.
(2) The governor-general is not personally brought
into collision with the
legislature by the direct exercise of a veto of its legislative acts, since the ministry is responsible for all
legislation and must
stand or fall by its important measures. The passage of a measure of which it disapproved as a ministry would mean in
the majority of cases a
resignation, and it is not possible to suppose that the governor would be asked to exercise a prerogative of the
Crown which has been in
disuse since the establishment of responsible government and would now be a revolutionary measure even in Canada.
In the United States there is
danger of frequent collision between the president and the two legislative branches, should
a very critical exercise
of the veto, as in President Johnson's time, occur at a time when the public mind was deeply agitated. The
chief magistrate loses
in dignity and influence whenever the legislature overrides the veto, and congress becomes a despotic master for the
time being.
(3) The Canadian minister, having control of the
finances and taxes and
of all matters of administration, is directly responsible to parliament and sooner or later to the people for
the manner in which
public functions have been discharged. All important measures are initiated by the cabinet, and on every question of
public interest the
ministers are bound to have a definite policy if they wish to retain the confidence of the legislature. Even in the
case of private
legislation they are also the guardians of the public interests and are responsible to the parliament and the people
for any neglect in
particular.
On the other hand in the United States the
financial and general
legislation of congress is left to the control of committees, over which the president and his cabinet have no direct
influence, and the
chairman of which may have ambitious objects in direct antagonism to the men in office.
(4) In the Canadian system the
speaker is a functionary who certainly has his party proclivities, but it is felt that as
long as he occupies the
chair all political parties can depend on his justice and impartiality. Responsible government makes the
premier and his
ministers responsible for the constitution of the committees and for the opinions and decisions that may emanate from
them. A government that
would constantly endeavour to shift its responsibilities on committees, even of its own selection, would soon
disappear from the
treasury benches. Responsibility in legislation is accordingly ensured, financial measures prevented from being
made the footballs of
ambitious and irresponsible politicians, and the impartiality and dignity of the speakership guaranteed by the
presence in parliament of a cabinet having the direction and supervision of
business.
On the other hand, in the United States, the
speaker of the House of
Representatives becomes, from the very force of circumstances, a political leader, and the spectacle is
presented--in fact from the time of Henry Clay--so strange to us familiar with
English methods, of
decisions given by him with clearly party objects, and of committees formed by him with purely political aims, as
likely as not with a view to thwart the ambition either of a president who
is looking to a second
term or of some prominent member of the cabinet who has presidential aspirations. And all this lowering of
the dignity of the chair
is due to the absence of a responsible minister to lead the House. The very position which the speaker is
forced to take from time to time--notably in the case of Mr. Reed[30]--is
clearly the result of
the defects in the constitutional system of the United States, and is so much evidence that a responsible party leader
is an absolute necessity
in congress. A legislature must be led, and congress has been attempting to get out of a crucial difficulty
by all sorts of
questionable shifts which only show the inherent weakness of the existing system.
In the absence of any
provision for the unity of policy between the executive and legislative authorities of the
United States, it is
impossible for any nation to have a positive guarantee that a treaty it may negotiate with the former can be ratified.
The sovereign of Great
Britain enters into treaties with foreign powers with the advice and assistance of his constitutional advisers, who
are immediately
responsible to parliament for their counsel in such matters. In theory it is the prerogative of the Crown to make a
treaty; in practice it is that of the ministry. It is not constitutionally
imperative to refer such
treaties to parliament for its approval--the consent of the Crown is sufficient; but it is sometimes done under
exceptional
circumstances, as in the case of the cession of Heligoland. In any event the action of the ministry in the matter is
invariably open to the
review of parliament, and the ministry may be censured by an adverse vote for the advice given to the
sovereign, and forced to retire from office. In the United States the
senate must ratify all
treaties by a two-thirds vote, but unless there is a majority in that House of the same political complexion as the
president the treaty may be refused. No cabinet minister is present, to
lead the House, as in
England, and assume all the responsibility of the president's action. It is almost impossible to suppose that an English
ministry would consent
to a treaty that would be unpopular in parliament and the country. The existence of the government would
depend on its action. In
the United States both president and senate have divided responsibilities. The constitution makes no
provision for unity in
such important matters of national obligation.
The great advantages of the
English, or Canadian, system lie in the interest created among all classes of the people
by the discussions of
the different legislative bodies. Parliamentary debate involves the fate of cabinets, and the public mind is
consequently led to study all issues of importance. The people know and feel
that they must be called
upon sooner or later to decide between the parties contending on the floor of the legislature, and consequently
are obliged to give an
intelligent consideration to public affairs. Let us see what Bagehot, ablest of critics, says on this point:--
"At present there is business
in their attention (that is to say, of the English or Canadian people). They
assist at the
determining crisis; they assist or help it. Whether the government will go out or remain is determined by
the debate and by the
division in parliament And the opinion out of doors, the secret pervading disposition of
society, has a great
influence on that division. The nation feels that its judgment is important, and it strives to judge. It
succeeds in deciding
because the debates and the discussions give it the facts and arguments. But under the
presidential government
the nation has, except at the electing moment, no influence; it has not the ballot-box before it;
its virtue is gone and
it must wait till its instant of despotism again returns. There are doubtless debates in the
legislature, but they
are prologues without a play. The prize of power is not in the gift of the legislature. No presidential
country needs to form
daily delicate opinions, or is helped in forming them."
Then when the people do go to
the ballot-box, they cannot intelligently influence the policy of the
government. If they vote for a president, then congress may have a policy quite
different from his; if
they vote for members of congress, they cannot change the opinions of the president. If the president changes his
cabinet at any time,
they have nothing to say about it, for its members are not important as wheels in the legislative machinery. Congress
may pass a bill of which
the people express their disapproval at the first opportunity when they choose a new congress, but still it may
remain on the
statute-book because the senate holds views different from the newly elected House, and cannot be politically changed
until after a long
series of legislative elections. As Professor Woodrow Wilson well puts it in an able essay:--[31]
"Public opinion has no easy
vehicle for its judgments, no quick channels for its action. Nothing about the
system is direct and
simple. Authority is perplexingly subdivided and distributed, and responsibility has to be hunted
down in out-of-the-way
corners. So that the sum of the whole matter is that the means of working for the fruits of
good government are not
readily to be found. The average citizen may be excused for esteeming government at best
but a haphazard affair
upon which his vote and all his influence can have but little effect. How is his choice of representative in congress to affect the policy of
the country as regards
the questions in which he is most interested if the man for whom he votes has no
chance of getting on the
standing committee which has virtual charge of those questions? How is it to make any
difference who is chosen
president? Has the president any great authority in matters of vital policy? It seems a thing of
despair to get any
assurance that any vote he may cast will even in an infinitesimal degree affect the essential courses
of administration. There
are so many cooks mixing their ingredients in the national broth that it seems
hopeless, this thing of
changing one cook at a time."
Under such a system it cannot
be expected that the people will take the same deep interest in elections and feel as
directly responsible for
the character of the government as when they can at one election and by one verdict decide the fate of a
government, whose policy on great issues must be thoroughly explained to them
at the polls. This
method of popular government is more real and substantial than a system which does not allow the people to
influence congressional
legislation and administrative action through a set of men sitting in congress and having a common policy.
I think it does not require
any very elaborate argument to show that when men feel and know that the ability they show
in parliament may be
sooner or later rewarded by a seat on the treasury benches, and that they will then have a determining voice in the
government of the
country, be it dominion or province, they must be stimulated by a keener interest in public life, a closer
watchfulness over legislation and administration, a greater readiness for
discussing all public
questions, and a more studied appreciation of public opinion outside the legislative halls. Every man in parliament is
a premier in posse.
While asking my readers to recall what I have already said as to the effect of responsible government on the
public men and people of
Canada, I shall also here refer them to some authorities worthy of all respect.
Mr. Bagehot says with his
usual clearness:--[32]
"To belong to a debating society adhering to an
executive (and this is
no inapt description of a congress under a presidential constitution) is not an object to
stir a noble ambition,
and is a position to encourage idleness. The members of a parliament excluded from office can
never be comparable,
much less equal, to those of a parliament not excluded from office. The presidential government
by its nature divides
political life into two halves, an executive half and a legislative half, and by so dividing
it, makes neither half
worth a man's having--worth his making it a continuous career--worthy to absorb, as cabinet
government absorbs, his
whole soul. The statesmen from whom a nation chooses under a presidential system are much
inferior to those from
whom it chooses under a cabinet system, while the
selecting apparatus is also far less discerning."
An American writer, Prof.
Denslow,[33] does not hesitate to express the opinion very emphatically that "as it is, in
no country do the people
feel such an overwhelming sense of the littleness of the men in charge of public affairs" as in the United States.
And in another place he
dwells on the fact that "responsible government educates office-holders into a high and honourable sense of
their accountability to
the people," and makes "statesmanship a permanent pursuit followed by a skilled class of men."
Prof. Woodrow Wilson says
that,[34] so far from men being trained to legislation by congressional government,
"independence and ability are repressed under the tyranny of the rules, and
practically the favour
of the popular branch of congress is concentrated in the speaker and a few--very few--expert parliamentarians." Elsewhere
he shows that
"responsibility is spread thin, and no vote or debate can gather it." As a matter of fact and experience, he comes to
the conclusion "the more
power is divided the more irresponsible it becomes and the petty character of the leadership of each committee
contributes towards
making its despotism sure by making its duties interesting."
Professor James Bryee, it will
be admitted, is one of the fairest of critics in his review of the institutions of the
United States; but he,
too, comes to the conclusion[35] that the system of congressional government destroys the unity of the House (of
representatives) as a
legislative body; prevents the capacity of the best members from being brought to bear upon any one piece of legislation,
however important;
cramps debate; lessens the cohesion and harmony of legislation; gives facilities for the exercise of underhand and even
corrupt influence;
reduces responsibility; lowers the interest of the nation in the proceedings of congress.
In another place,[36] after
considering the relations between the executive and the legislature, he expresses his
opinion that the framers
of the constitution have "so narrowed the sphere of the executive as to prevent it from leading the
country, or even its own party in the country." They endeavoured "to make
members of congress
independent, but in doing so they deprived them of some of the means which European legislators enjoy of learning how
to administer, of
learning even how to legislate in administrative topics. They condemned them to be architects without science,
critics without
experience, censors without responsibility."
And further on, when
discussing the faults of democratic government in the United States--and Professor Bryce, we must
remember, is on the
whole most hopeful of its future--he detects as amongst its characteristics "a certain commonness of mind and
tone, a want of dignity
and elevation in and about the conduct of public affairs, and insensibility to the nobler aspects and finer
responsibilities of
national life." Then he goes on to say[37] that representative and parliamentary system "provides the means of
mitigating the evils to be feared from ignorance or haste, for it vests the
actual conduct of
affairs in a body of specially chosen and presumably qualified men, who may themselves intrust such of their functions
as need peculiar
knowledge or skill to a smaller governing body or bodies selected in respect of their more eminent fitness. By this
method the defects of
democracy are remedied while its strength is retained." The members of American legislatures, being disjoined from the
administrative offices,
"are not chosen for their ability or experience; they are not much respected or trusted, and finding nothing
exceptional expected
from them, they behave as ordinary men."
"If corruption," wrote Judge
Story, that astute political student, "ever silently eats its way into the vitals of
this Republic, it will
be because the people are unable to bring responsibility home to the executive through his chosen ministers."[38]
As I have already stated in
the first pages of this chapter, long before the inherent weaknesses of the American
system were pointed out
by the eminent authorities just quoted, Lord Elgin was able, with that intuitive sagacity which he applied to the study
of political
institutions, to see the unsatisfactory working of the clumsy, irresponsible mechanism of our republican
neighbours.
"Mr. Fillmore," he is writing in November, 1850,
"stands to his congress
very much in the same relation in which I stood to my assembly in Jamaica. There is the same absence of
effective responsibility
in the conduct of legislation, the same want of concurrent action between the parts of the
political machine. The
whole business of legislation in the American congress, as well as in the state legislatures, is conducted in the manner
in which railway
business was conducted in the House of Commons at a time when it is to be feared that, notwithstanding the high standard
of honour in the British
parliament, there was a good deal of jobbing. For instance, our reciprocity measure was pressed by us at
Washington last session
just as a railway bill in 1845 or 1846 would have been pressed in parliament There was no government to deal with.
The interests of the
union as a whole, distinct from local and sectional interests, had no organ in the representative bodies; it was all a
question of canvassing
this member of congress or the other. It is easy to perceive that, under such a system, jobbing must
become not the exception
but the rule,"--remarks as true in 1901 as in 1850.
It is important also to dwell
on the fact that in Canada the permanency of the tenure of public officials and
the introduction of the
secret ballot have been among the results of responsible government. Through the influence and agency of
the same system,
valuable reforms have been made in Canada in the election laws, and the trial of controverted elections has been taken
away from partisan
election committees and given to a judiciary independent of political influences. In these matters the irresponsible
system of the United
States has not been able to effect any needful reforms. Such measures can be best carried by ministers having the
initiation and direction of legislation and must necessarily be retarded
when power is divided
among several authorities having no unity of policy on any question.
Party government undoubtedly
has its dangers arising from personal ambition and unscrupulous partisanship, but as
long as men must range
themselves in opposing camps on every subject, there is no other system practicable by which great questions can be
carried and the working
of representative government efficiently conducted. The framers of the constitution of the United States
no doubt thought they
had succeeded in placing the president and his officers above party when they instituted the method of electing the
former by a body of
select electors chosen for that purpose in each state, who were expected to act irrespective of all political
considerations. A
president so selected would probably choose his officers also on the same basis. The practical results, however, have
been to prove that in
every country of popular and representative institutions party government must prevail. Party elects men to the
presidency and to the
floor of the Senate and House of Representatives, and the election to those important positions is directed and
controlled by a political machinery far exceeding in its completeness any
party organization in
England or in Canada. The party convention is now the all important portion of the machinery for the election of the
president, and the
safeguard provided by the constitution for the choice of the best man is a mere nullity. One thing is quite certain,
that party government
under the direction of a responsible ministry, responsible to parliament and the people for every act of
administration and
legislation, can have far less dangerous tendencies than a party system which elects an executive not amenable to
public opinion for four
years, divides the responsibilities of government among several authorities, prevents harmony among party leaders,
does not give the
executive that control over legislation necessary to efficient administration of public affairs, and in short
offers a direct premium
to conflict among all the authorities of the state--a conflict, not so much avoided by the checks and balances of the
constitution as by the
patience, common sense, prudence, and respect for law which presidents and their cabinets have as a rule shown at
national crises. But we can clearly see that, while the executive has lost in
influence, congress has
gained steadily to an extent never contemplated by the founders of the constitution, and there are thoughtful men who
say that the true
interests of the country have not always been promoted by the change. Party government in Canada ensures unity of
policy, since the premier of the cabinet becomes the controlling part of the
political machinery of
the state; no such thing as unity of policy is possible under a system which gives the president neither the
dignity of a
governor-general, nor the strength of a premier, and splits up political power among any number of would-be party
leaders, who adopt or
defeat measures by private intrigues, make irresponsible recommendations, and form political combinations
for purely selfish
ends.[39]
It seems quite clear then that the system of
responsible ministers
makes the people more immediately responsible for the efficient administration of public affairs than is possible
in the United States.
The fact of having the president and the members of congress elected for different terms, and of dividing the
responsibilities of
government among these authorities does not allow the people to exercise that direct influence which is ensured,
as the experience of
Canada and of England proves, by making one body of men immediately responsible to the electors for the conduct of
public affairs at
frequently recurring periods, arranged by well understood rules, so as to ensure a correct expression of public opinion
on all important issues.
The committees which assist in governing this country are the choice of the people's representatives assembled
in parliament, and every
four or five years and sometimes even sooner in case of a crisis, the people have to decide on the wisdom of
the choice.
The system has assuredly its drawbacks like all
systems of government
that have been devised and worked out by the brain of man. In all frankness I confess that this review would be
incomplete were I not to refer to certain features of the Canadian system
of government which seem
to me on the surface fraught with inherent danger at some time or other to independent legislative judgment. Any one
who has closely watched
the evolution of this system for years past must admit that there is a dangerous tendency in the Dominion to
give the executive--I
mean the ministry as a body--too superior a control over the legislative authority. When a ministry has in its
gift the appointment not
only of the heads of the executive government in the provinces, that is to say, of the lieutenant-governors, who
can be dismissed by the
same power at any moment, but also of the members of the Upper House of Parliament itself, besides the judiciary
and numerous
collectorships and other valuable offices, it is quite obvious that the element of human ambition and selfishness has
abundant room for
operation on the floor of the legislature, and a bold and skilful cabinet is also able to wield a machinery very
potent under a system of
party government. In this respect the House of Representatives may be less liable to insidious influences than a
House of Commons at
critical junctures when individual conscience or independent judgment appears on the point of asserting itself. The
House of Commons may be
made by skilful party management a mere recording or registering body of an able and determined cabinet. I see less
liability to such silent though potent influences in a system which makes
the president and a
house of representatives to a large degree independent of each other, and leaves his important nominations to office
under the control of the
senate, a body which has no analogy whatever with the relatively weak branch of the Canadian parliament,
essentially weak while its membership depends on the government itself. I
admit at once that in
the financial dependence of the provinces on the central federal authority, in the tenure of the office of the
chief magistrates of the provinces, in the control exercised by the
ministry over the highest legislative body of Canada, that is, highest in
point of dignity and
precedence, there are elements of weakness; but at the same time it must be remembered that, while the influence and
power of the Canadian
government may be largely increased by the exercise of its great patronage in the hypothetical cases I have
suggested, its action is always open to the approval or disapproval of
parliament and it has to meet an opposition face to face. Its acts are open
to legislative
criticism, and it may at any moment be forced to retire by public opinion operating upon the House of Commons.
On the other hand the
executive in the United States for four years may be dominant over congress by skilful
management. A strong
executive by means of party wields a power which may be used for purposes of mere personal ambition, and may by
clever management of the
party machine and with the aid of an unscrupulous majority retain power for a time even when it is not in accord
with the true sentiment
of the country; but under a system like that of Canada, where every defect in the body politic is probed to the bottom
in the debates of
parliament, which are given by the public press more fully than is the practice in the neighbouring republic, the people
have a better
opportunity of forming a correct judgment on every matter and giving an immediate verdict when the proper time comes
for an appeal to them,
the sovereign power. Sometimes this judgment is too often influenced by party prejudices and the real issue is too
often obscured by
skilful party management, but this is inevitable under every system of popular government; and happily, should it come to
the worst, there is
always in the country that saving remnant of intelligent, independent men of whom Matthew Arnold has written, who can
come forward and by
their fearless and bold criticism help the people in any crisis when truth, honour and justice are at stake and the
great mass of electors
fail to appreciate the true situation of affairs. But we may have confidence in the good sense and judgment of the
people as a whole when
time is given them to consider the situation of affairs. Should men in power be unfaithful to their public
obligations, they will
eventually be forced by the conditions of public life to yield their positions to those who merit public confidence. If
it should ever happen in
Canada that public opinion has become so low that public men feel that they can, whenever they choose, divert
it to their own selfish
ends by the unscrupulous use of partisan agencies and corrupt methods, and that the highest motives of public
life are forgotten in a
mere scramble for office and power, then thoughtful Canadians might well despair of the future of their country; but,
whatever may be the
blots at times on the surface of the body politic, there is yet no reason to believe that the public conscience of
Canada is weak or
indifferent to character and integrity in active politics. The instincts of an English people are always in the
direction of the pure
administration of justice and the efficient and honest government of the country, and though it may sometimes happen
that unscrupulous
politicians and demagogues will for a while dominate in the party arena, the time of retribution and purification
must come sooner or
later. English methods must prevail in countries governed by an English people and English institutions.
It is sometimes said that it
is vain to expect a high ideal in public life, that the same principles that apply to
social and private life
cannot always be applied to the political arena if party government is to succeed; but this is the doctrine of the mere
party manager, who is
already too influential in Canada as in the United States, and not of a true patriotic statesman. It is wiser to believe
that the nobler the
object the greater the inspiration, and at all events, it is better to aim high than to sink low. It is all important
that the body politic
should be kept pure and that public life should be considered a public trust. Canada is still young in her political
development, and the
fact that her population has been as a rule a steady, fixed population, free from those dangerous elements
which have come into the
United States with such rapidity of late years, has kept her relatively free from any serious social and
political dangers which
have afflicted her neighbours, and to which I believe they themselves, having inherited English institutions and being
imbued with the spirit
of English law, will always in the end rise superior. Great responsibility, therefore, rests in the first
instance upon the people of Canada, who must select the best and purest
among them to serve the
country, and, secondly, upon the men whom the legislature chooses to discharge the trust of carrying on the government.
No system of government
or of laws can of itself make a people virtuous and happy unless their rulers recognize in the fullest sense
their obligations to the
state and exercise their powers with prudence and unselfishness, and endeavour to elevate and not
degrade public opinion
by the insidious acts and methods of the lowest political ethics. A constitution may be as perfect as human agencies
can make it, and yet be
relatively worthless while the large responsibilities and powers entrusted to the governing body--responsibilities
and powers not embodied
in acts of parliament--are forgotten in view of party triumph, personal ambition, or pecuniary gain.
"The laws," says Burke,
"reach but a very little way. Constitute government how you please, infinitely the greater part of it must depend upon
the exercise of the
powers which are left at large to the prudence and uprightness of ministers of state. Even all the use and potency
of the laws depend upon
them. Without them your commonwealth is no better than a scheme upon paper, and not a living, active, effective
organization." |