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Fathers of Confederation |
Maritime Union |
George Brown |
Pan-Federalism |
US Civil War |
Canada's Proposals |
River Cruise |
Charlottetown | The Quebec
Conference | The London
Conference | July 1, 1867 George Brown was a
radical, fiery, opinionated, orator and editor who grew
up in the rough and tumble politics of the Union of the
Canada's. He was anti-Catholic and believed that Lower
Canada or Quebec had undue power in the Union between
Upper and Lower Canada. One of his personal themes was
representation by population. He believed that the two
Canada's should have a number of representatives in the
Union's assembly that would be equivalent to the number
of people in the region. Brown was the leader of the
reform party who were the forerunners of the Liberals.
He was a firm believer
in the separation of church and state, even though he
was a devout Scots Presbyterian. He was the founder and
editor of the Globe newspaper and used this media to
espouse his opinions. He was a bitter opponent of John A
Macdonald and they were famous rivals in the Unions
Government. Brown was the last person one would have
expected to team up with the Conservatives in Macdonald
on anything, yet he had a vision of a British North
America. He perhaps saw a greater protection of the
British system in that Union and perhaps a way of
shifting the balance against the French Canadian
Catholics in government.
"For
the essential thing about the Globe and the movement it
led is that it represented the aspirations and the
general outlook on life of the pioneer Upper Canadian
farmer. The "Clear Grit" party in Upper Canada was an
expression of the "frontier" in our Canadian politics...
Though Brown himself sat for one of the Toronto seats
from 1857 to 1861, the Grits never succeeded in
capturing the main urban centres. Toronto. London,
Hamilton, and Kingston pretty steadily elected
supporters of the Macdonald-Cartier coalition."
Historian Frank H.
Underhill With
Upper Canada, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince
Edward Island all in one government, he could perhaps
gain the support he sought to weld power. He also had
the greater vision of a British North America which
would eventually include the lands to the west of Upper
Canada. He was incisive enough and had the courage to
put aside a lifetime of personal differences to approach
Macdonald to initiate the movement towards bringing the
colonies and Canadas together and begin talks which
could lead to general union. This solution would also
break the deadlock in the politics of the Canada's and
activate a whole new alignment of politic forces
throughout the Maritimes and both Upper and Lower
Canada.
This speech
was deliver during the Confederation debates on February
8th, 1865 - In the legislature of the United Province of
Canada
HON. GEORGE
BROWN rose and said : It is with no
ordinary gratification I rise to address the House on
this occasion. I cannot help feeling that the struggle
of half a lifetime for constitutional reform—the
agitations in the country, and the fierce contests in
this chamber—the strife, and the discord and the abuse
of many years—are all compensated by the great scheme of
reform which is now in your hands. The Attorney-Genera]
for Upper Canada, as well as the Attorney-General for
Lower Canada, in addressing the House last night, were
anxious to have it understood that this scheme for
uniting British America under one government is
something different from “representation by
population”—is something different from “joint
authority”—but is in fact the very scheme of the
government of which they were members in 1858. Now, it
is all very well that my honourable friends should
receive credit for the large share they have contributed
towards maturing the measure before the House; but I
could not help reflecting while they spoke, that if this
was their very scheme in 1858, they succeeded
wonderfully in bottling it up from all the world except
themselves, and I could not help regretting that we had
to wait till 1864 until this mysterious plant of 1858
was forced to fruition. For myself, I care not who gets
the credit of this scheme—I believe it contains the best
features of all the suggestions that have been made in
the last ten years for the settlement of our troubles;
and the whole feeling in my mind now is one of joy and
thankfulness that there were found men of position and
influence in Canada who, at a moment of serious crisis,
had nerve and patriotism enough to cast aside political
partisanship, to banish personal considerations, and
unite for the accomplishment of a measure so fraught
with advantage to their common country. It was a bold
step in the then existing state of public feeling for
many members of the House to vote for the constitutional
committee moved for by me last session—it was a very
bold step for many of the members of that committee to
speak and vote candidly upon it—it was a still bolder
thing for many to place their names to the report that
emanated from that committee—but it was an infinitely
bolder step for the gentlemen who now occupy these
treasury benches, to brave the misconceptions and
suspicions that would certainly attach to the act, and
enter the same government. And it is not to be denied
that such a coalition demanded no ordinary
justification. But who does not feel that every one of
us has to-day ample justification and reward for all we
did in the document now under discussion ? But seven
short months have passed away since the coalition
government was formed, yet already are we submitting a
scheme well-weighed and matured, for the erection of a
future empire—a scheme which has been received at home
and abroad with almost universal approval.
HON. MR.
HOLTON (ironically): Hear, hear !
HON. MR.
BROWN : My honourable friend dissents from that, but is
it possible truthfully to deny it ? Has it not been
approved and endorsed by the governments of five
separate colonies ? Has it not received the all but
unanimous approval of the press of Canada ? Has it not
been heartily and unequivocally endorsed by the electors
of Canada ? My honourable friend opposite cries “No,
no,” but I say “Yes, yes.” Since the coalition was
formed, and its policy of federal union announced, there
have been no fewer than twenty-five parliamentary
elections—fourteen for members of the Upper House, and
eleven for members of the Lower House. At the fourteen
Upper House contests, but three candidates dared to show
them-selves before the people in opposition to the
government scheme; and of these, two were rejected, and
one—only one—succeeded in finding a seat. At the eleven
contests for the Lower House, but one candidate on
either side of politics ventured to oppose the scheme,
and I hope that even he will yet cast his vote in favour
of confederation. Of these twenty-five electoral
contests, fourteen were in Upper Canada, but not at one
of them did a candidate appear in opposition to our
scheme. And let it be observed how large a portion of
the country these twenty-five electoral districts
embraced. It is true that the eleven Lower House
elections only included that number of counties, but the
fourteen Upper House elections embraced no fewer than
forty counties. Of the 130 constituencies, therefore,
into which Canada is divided for representation in this
chamber, not fewer than fifty have been called on since
our scheme was announced to pronounce at the polls
their verdict upon it, and at the whole of them but four
candidates on both sides of politics ventured to give it
opposition.
Was I not
right then in asserting that the electors of Canada had,
in the most marked manner, pronounced in favour of the
scheme ? And will honourable gentlemen deny that the
people and press of Great Britain have received it with
acclamations of approval ?—that the government of
England has cordially endorsed and accepted it?—ay, that
even the press and the public men of the United States
have spoken of it with a degree of respect they never
before accorded to any colonial movement ? I venture to
assert that no scheme of equal magnitude, ever placed
before the world, was received with higher eulogiums,
with more universal approbation, than the measure we
have now the pleasure of submitting for the acceptance
of the Canadian parliament. And no higher eulogy could,
I think, be pronounced than that I heard a few weeks
ago from the lips of one of the foremost of British
statesmen, that the system of government we proposed
seemed to him a happy compound of the best features of
the British and American constitutions. And well might
our present attitude in Canada arrest the earnest
attention of other countries. Here is a people composed
of two distinct races, speaking different languages,
with religious and social and municipal and educational
institutions totally different ; with sectional
hostilities of such a character as to render government
for many years well nigh impossible ; with a
constitution so unjust in the view of one section as to
justify any resort to enforce a remedy. And yet, here we
sit, patiently and temperately discussing how these
great evils and hostilities may justly and amicably be
swept away forever. We are endeavouring to adjust
harmoniously greater difficulties than have plunged
other countries into all the horrors of civil war. We
are striving to do peacefully and satisfactorily what
Holland and Belgium, after years of strife, were unable
to accomplish. We are seeking by calm discussion to
settle questions that Austria and Hungary, that Denmark
and Germany, that Russia and Poland, could only crush by
the iron heel of armed force. We are seeking to do
without foreign intervention that which deluged in blood
the sunny plains of Italy. we are striving to settle
forever issues hardly less momentous than those that
have rent the neighbouring republic and are now exposing
it to all the horrors of civil war. Have we not then
great cause of thankfulness that we have found a better
way for the solution of our troubles than that which
has entailed on other countries such deplorable results
? And should not every one of us endeavour to rise to
the magnitude of the occasion, and earnestly seek to
deal with this question to the end in the same candid
and conciliatory spirit in which, so far, it has been
discussed ?
The scene
presented by this chamber at this moment, I venture to
affirm, has few parallels in history. One hundred years
have passed away since these provinces became by
conquest part of the British Empire. I speak in no
boastful spirit—I desire not for a moment to excite a
painful thought—what was then the fortune of war of the
brave French nation, might have been ours on that
well-fought field. I recall those olden times merely to
mark the fact that here sit to-day the descendants of
the victors and the vanquished in the fight of 1759,
with all the differences of language, religion, civil
law and social habit, nearly as distinctly marked as
they were a century ago. Here we sit to-day seeking
amicably to find a remedy for constitutional evils and
injustice complained of—by the vanquished? No, but
complained of by the conquerors ! Here sit the
representatives of the British population claiming
justice—only justice; and here sit the representatives
of the French population, discussing in the French
tongue whether we shall have it. One hundred years have
passed away since the conquest of Quebec, but here sit
the children of the victor and the vanquished, all
avowing hearty attachment to the British Crown—all
earnestly deliberating how we shall best extend the
blessings of British institutions—how a great people may
be established on this continent in close and hearty
connection with Great Britain Where, in the page of
history, shall we find a parallel to this ? Will it not
stand as an imperishable monument to the generosity of
British rule ?
And it is
not in Canada alone that this scene is being witnessed.
Four other colonies are at this moment occupied as we
are—declaring their hearty love for the parent state,
and deliberating with us how they may best discharge the
great duty entrusted to their hands, and give their aid
in developing the teeming resources of these vast
possessions. And well may the work we have unitedly
proposed rouse the ambition and energy of every true man
in British America. Look at the map of the continent of
America. and mark that island (Newfoundland) commanding
the mouth of the noble river that almost cuts our
continent in twain. Well, that island is equal in extent
to the kingdom of Portugal. Cross the straits to the
mainland, and you touch the hospitable shores of Nova
Scotia, a country quite as large as the kingdom of
Greece. Then mark the sister province of New
Brunswick—equal in extent to Denmark and Switzerland
combined. Pass up the River St. Lawrence to Lower
Canada—a country as large as France. Pass on to Upper
Canada, twenty thousand square miles larger than Great
Britain and Ireland put together. Cross over the
continent to the shores of the Pacific, and you are in
British Columbia, the land of golden promise—equal in
extent to the Austrian empire. I speak not now of the
vast Indian territories that lie between—greater in
extent than the whole soil of Russia—and that will ere
long, I trust, be opened up to civilization under the
auspices of the British American confederation. Well,
the bold scheme in your hands is nothing less than to
gather all these countries into one—to organize them all
under one government, with the protection of the British
flag, and in heartiest sympathy and affection with our
fellow-subjects in the land that gave us birth. Our
scheme is to establish a government that will seek to
turn the tide of European emigration into this northern
half of the American continent—that will strive to
develop its great natural resources—and that will
endeavour to maintain liberty, and justice, and
Christianity through-out the land.
MR. T. C.
WALLBRIDGE : When ?
HON. MR.
CARTIER : Very soon !
HON. MR.
BROWN : The honourable member for North Hastings asks
when all this can be done ? The whole great ends of this
confederation may not be realized in the lifetime of
many who now hear me. we imagine not that such a
structure can be built in a month or in a year. What we
propose now is but to lay the foundations of the
structure—to set in motion the governmental machinery
that will one day, we trust, extend from the Atlantic to
the Pacific. And we take special credit to ourselves
that the system we have devised, while admirably adapted
to our present situation, is capable of gradual and
efficient expansion in future years to meet all the
great purposes contemplated by our scheme. But if the
honourable gentleman will only recall to mind that when
the United States seceded from the mother country, and
for many years afterwards, their population was not
nearly equal to ours at this moment—that their internal
improvements did not then approach to what we have
already attained, and that their trade and commerce was
not then a third of what ours has already reached—I
think that he will see that the fulfilment of our hopes
may not be so very remote as at first sight might be
imagined. And he will be strengthened in that conviction
if he remembers that what we propose to do is to be done
with the cordial sympathy and assistance of that great
power of which it is our happiness to form a part.
Such are the
objects of attainment to which the British American
Conference pledged itself in October. And said I not
rightly that such a scheme is well fitted to fire the
ambition and rouse the energies of every member of this
House ? Does it not lift us above the petty politics of
the past, and present to us high purposes and great
interests that may well call forth all the intellectual
ability and all the energy and enterprise to be found
among us? I readily admit all the gravity of the
question, and that it ought to be considered cautiously
and thoroughly before adoption. Far be it from me to
deprecate the closest criticism, or to doubt for a
moment the sincerity or patriotism of those who feel it
their duty to oppose the measure. But in considering a
question on which hangs the future destiny of half a
continent, ought not the spirit of mere fault-finding to
be hushed?--ought not the voice of partisanship to be
banished from our debates ?—ought we not sit down and
discuss the arguments presented in the earnest and
candid spirit of men bound by the same interests,
seeking a common end, and loving the same country? Some
honourable gentlemen seem to imagine that the members of
government have a deeper interest in this scheme than
others—but what possible interest can any of us have
except that which we share with every citizen of the
land? What risk does any one run from this measure in
which all of us do not fully participate? What possible
inducement could we have to urge this scheme, except our
earnest and heartfelt conviction that it will inure to
the solid. and lasting advantage of our country ?
There is one
consideration that cannot be banished from this
discussion, and that ought, I think, to be remembered in
every word we utter ; it is that the constitutional
system of Canada cannot remain as it is now. Something
must be done. We cannot stand still. We cannot go back
to chronic, sectional hostility and discord—to a state
of perpetual ministerial crises. The events of the last
eight months cannot be obliterated ; the solemn
admissions of men of all parties can never be erased.
The claims of Upper Canada for justice must be met, and
met now. I say, then, that every one who raises his
voice in hostility to this measure is bound to keep
before him, when he speaks, all the perilous
consequences of its rejection ; I say that no man who
has a true regard for the well-being of Canada can give
a vote against this scheme, unless he is prepared to
offer, in amendment, some better remedy for the evils
and injustice that have so long threatened the peace of
our country. And not only must the scheme proposed in
amendment be a better scheme—it must be something that
can be carried.
I see an
honourable friend now before me, for whose opinions I
have the very highest respect, who says to me : "Mr.
Brown, you should not have settled this part of the plan
as you have done; here is the way you should have framed
it." “Well, my dear sir,” is my reply, “I perfectly
agree with you, but it could not be done. Whether we ask
for parliamentary reform for Canada alone or in union
with the Maritime Provinces, the views of French
Canadians must be consulted as well as ours. This scheme
can be carried, and no scheme can be that has not the
support of both sections of the province.”
HON. Mr.
CARTIER : There is the question.
HON. MR.
BROWN : Yes, that is the question and the whole
question. No constitution ever framed was without
defect; no act of human wisdom was ever free from
imperfection ; no amount of talent and wisdom and
integrity combined in preparing such a scheme could have
placed it beyond the reach of criticism. And the framers
of this scheme had immense special difficulties to
overcome. We had the prejudices of race and language and
religion to deal with ; and we had to encounter all the
rivalries of trade and commerce, and all the jealousies
of diversified local interests. To assert, then, that
our scheme is without fault, would be folly. It was
necessarily the work of concession ; not one of the
thirty-three framers but had, on some points, to yield
his opinions ; and, for myself, I freely admit that I
struggled earnestly, for days together, to have portions
of the scheme amended. But admitting all this—admitting
all the difficulties that beset us—admitting frankly
that defects in the measure exist—I say that, taking the
scheme as a whole, it has my cordial, enthusiastic
support, without hesitation or reservation. I believe it
will accomplish all, and more than all, that we, who
have so long fought the battle of parliamentary reform,
ever hoped to see accomplished. I believe that, while
granting security for local interests, it will give free
scope for carrying out the will of the whole people in
general matters—that it will draw closer the bonds that
unite us to Great Britain—and that it will lay the
foundations deep and strong of a powerful and prosperous
people.
And if the
House will allow me to trespass to a somewhat unusual
degree on its indulgence, I am satisfied that I can
clearly establish that such are the results fairly to be
anticipated from the measure. There are two views in
which this scheme may be regarded, namely, the existing
evils it will remedy, and the new advantages it will
secure for us as a people. Let us begin by examining its
remedial provisions. First, then, it applies a complete
and satisfactory remedy to the injustice of the existing
system of parliamentary representation. The people of
Upper Canada have bitterly complained that though they
numbered four hundred thousand souls more than the
population of Lower Canada, and though they have
contributed three or four pounds to the general revenue
for every pound contributed by the sister province, yet
the Lower Canadians send to parliament as many
representatives as they do. Now, the measure in your
hands brings this injustice to an end ; it sweeps away
the line of demarcation between the two sections on all
matters common to the whole province ; it gives
representation according to numbers wherever found in
the House of Assembly ; and it provides a simple and
convenient system for readjusting the representation
after each decennial census. To this proposed
constitution of the Lower Chamber, I have heard only two
objections. It has been alleged that until after the
census of 1871, the number of members is to remain as at
present ; but this is a mistake. Upper Canada is to
receive from the start eighty-two representatives, and
Lower Canada sixty-five ; and what-ever increase the
census of 1871 may establish will be then adjusted. It
has also been objected that though the resolutions
provide that the existing parliament of Canada shall
establish the electoral divisions for the first
organization of the federal parliament, they do not
determine in whose hands the duty of distributing any
additional members is to be vested. No doubt on this
head need exist ; the federal parliament will of course
have full power to regulate all arrangements for the
election of its own members. But I am told by Upper
Canadians—the constitution of the Lower House is all
well enough, it is in the Upper House arrangements that
the scheme is objectionable. And first, it is said that
Upper Canada should have had in the legislative council
a greater number of members than Lower Canada.
MR. T. C.
WALLBRIDGE : Hear, hear !
HON. MR.
BROWN : The honourable member for North Hastings is of
that opinion ; but that gentleman is in favour of a
legislative union, and had we been forming a legislative
union, there might have been some force in the demand.
But the very essence of our compact is that the union
shall be federal and not legislative. Our Lower Canada
friends have agreed to give us representation by
population in the Lower House, on the express condition
that they shall have equality in the Upper House. On no
other condition could we have advanced a step ; and for
my part, I am quite willing that they should have it. In
maintaining the existing sectional boundaries and
handing over the control of local matters to local
bodies, we recognize, to a certain extent, a diversity
of interests ; and it was quite natural that the
protection for those interests, by equality in the Upper
Chamber, should be demanded by the less numerous
provinces. Honourable gentlemen may say that it will
erect a barrier in the Upper House against the just
influence that Upper Canada will exercise, by her
numbers, in the Lower House, over the general
legislation of the country. That may be true to a
certain extent, but honourable gentlemen will bear in
mind that that barrier, be it more or less, will not
affect money bills. Hitherto we have been paying a vast
proportion of the taxes, with little or no control over
the expenditure. But, under this plan, by our just
influence in the Lower Chamber, we shall hold the purse
strings, If, from this concession of equality in the
Upper Chamber, we are restrained from forcing through
measures which our friends of Lower Canada may consider
injurious to their interests, we shall, at any rate,
have power, which we never had before, to prevent them
from forcing through whatever we may deem unjust to us.
I think the compromise a fair one, and am persuaded that
it will work easily and satisfactorily. But it has been
said that the members of the Upper House ought not to be
appointed by the Crown, but should continue to be
elected by the people at large. On that question my
views have been often expressed. I have always been
opposed to a second elective chamber, and I am so still,
from the conviction that two elective houses are
inconsistent with the right working of the British
parliamentary system. I voted, almost alone, against the
change when the council was made elective, but I have
lived to see a vast majority of those who did the deed
wish it had not been clone. It is quite true, and I am
glad to acknowledge it, that many evils anticipated
from the change when the measure was adopted have not
been realized. I readily admit that men of the highest
character and position have been brought into the
council by the elective system, but it is equally true
that the system of appointment brought into it men of
the highest character and position. Whether appointed by
the Crown or elected by the people, since the
introduction of parliamentary government, the men who
have composed the Upper House of this legislature have
been men who would have done honour to any legislature
in the world. But what we most feared was, that the
legislative councillors would be elected under party
responsibility ; that a partisan spirit would soon show
itself in the chamber ; and that the right would soon be
asserted to an equal control with this House over money
bills. That fear has not been realized to any dangerous
extent. But is it not possible that such a claim might
ere long be asserted? Do we not hear, even now,
mutterings of a coming demand for it ? Nor can we forget
that the elected members came into that chamber
gradually ; that the large number of old appointed
members exercised much influence in maintaining the old
forms of the House, the old style of debate, and the old
barriers against encroachment on the privileges of the
Commons. But the appointed members of the council are
gradually passing away, and when the elective element
becomes supreme, who will venture to affirm that the
council would not claim that power over money bills
which this House claims as of right belonging to itself
? Could they not justly say that they represent the
people as well as we do, and that the control of the
purse strings ought, therefore, to belong to them as
much as to us? It is said they have not the power. But
what is to prevent them from enforcing it? Suppose we
had a conservative majority here, and a reform majority
above—or a conservative majority above and a reform
majority here—all elected under party obligations—what
is to prevent a dead-lock between the chambers ? It may
be called unconstitutional—but what is to prevent the
councillors (especially if they feel that in the dispute
of the hour they have the country at their back) from
practically exercising all the powers that be-long to
us? They might amend our money bills, they might throw
out all our bills if they liked, and bring to a stop the
whole machinery of government. And what could we do to
prevent them ? But, even supposing this were not the
case, and that the elective Upper House continued to be
guided by that discretion which has heretofore actuated
its proceedings, still, I think, we must all feel that
the election of members for such enormous districts as
form the constituencies of the Upper House has become a
great practical inconvenience. I say this from personal
experience, having long taken an active interest in the
electoral contests in Upper Canada. We have found
greater difficulty in inducing candidates to offer for
seats in the Upper House, than in getting ten times the
number for the Lower House. The constituencies are so
vast, that it is difficult to find gentle-men who have
the will to incur the labour of such a contest, who are
sufficiently known and popular enough throughout
districts so wide, and who have money enough to pay the
enormous bills, not incurred in any corrupt way—do not
fancy that I mean that for a moment—but the bills that
are sent in after the contest is over, and which the
candidates are compelled to pay if they ever hope to
present themselves for re-election.
But
honourable gentlemen say, “This may be all very well,
but you are taking an important power out of the hands
of the people, which they now possess." Now, this is a
mistake. We do not propose to do anything of the sort.
What we propose is, that the Upper House shall be
appointed from the best men of the country by those
holding the confidence of the representatives of the
people in this chamber. It is proposed that the
government of the day, which only lives by the approval
of this chamber, shall make the appointments, and be
responsible to the people for the selections they shall
make. Not a single appointment could be made, with
regard to which the government would not be open to
censure, and which the representatives of the people, in
this House, would not have an opportunity of condemning.
For myself, I have maintained the appointment principle,
as in opposition to the elective, ever since I came into
public life, and have never hesitated, when before the
people, to state my opinions in the broadest manner ;
and yet not in a single instance have I ever found a
constituency in Upper Canada, or a public meeting,
declaring its disapproval of appointment by the Crown
and its desire for election by the people at large. When
the change was made in 1855 there was not a single
petition from the people asking for it—it was in a
manner forced on the legislature. The real reason for
the change was that before responsible government was
introduced into this country, while the old
oligarchical system existed, the Upper House
continuously and systematically was at war with the
popular branch, and threw out every measure of a liberal
tendency. The result was that in the famous ninety-two
resolutions the introduction of the elective principle
into the Upper House was declared to be indispensable.
So long as Mr. Robert Baldwin remained in public life,
the thing could not be done ; but when he left the deed
was consummated. But it is said that if the members are
to be appointed for life, the number should be
unlimited—that, in the event of a dead-lock arising
between that chamber and this, there should be power to
overcome the difficulty by the appointment of more
members. Well, under the British system, in the case of
a legislative union, that might be a legitimate
provision. But honourable gentlemen must see that the
limitation of the numbers in the Upper House lies at the
base of the whole compact on which this scheme rests. It
is perfectly clear, as was contended by those who
represented Lower Canada in the conference, that if the
number of legislative councillors was made capable of
increase, you would thereby sweep away the whole
protection they had from the Upper Chamber. But it has
been said that, though you may not give the power to the
executive to increase the numbers of the Upper House in
the event of a dead-lock, you might limit the term for
which the members are appointed. I was myself in favour
of that proposition. I thought it would be well to
provide for a more frequent change in the composition of
the Upper House, and lessen the danger of the chamber
being largely composed of gentlemen whose advanced years
might forbid the punctual and vigorous discharge of
their public duties. Still, the objection made to this
was very strong. It was said : “Suppose you appoint them
for nine years, what will be the effect ? For the last
three or four years of their term they would be
anticipating its expiry, and anxiously looking to the
administration of the day for reappointment ; and the
consequence would be that a third of the members would
be under the influence of the executive.” The desire was
to render the Upper House a thoroughly independent body
—one that would be in the best position to canvass
dispassionately the measures of this House, and stand up
for the public interests in opposition to hasty or
partisan legislation. It was contended that there is no
fear of a dead-lock. We were reminded how the system of
appointing for life had worked in past years, since
responsible government was introduced; we were told
that the complaint was not then that the Upper Chamber
had been too obstructive a body—not that it had sought
to restrain the popular will, but that it had too
faithfully reflected the popular will. Undoubtedly that
was the complaint formerly pressed upon us, and I
readily admit that if ever there was a body to whom we
could safely entrust the power which by this measure we
propose to confer on the members of the Upper Chamber,
it is the body of gentlemen who at this moment compose
the legislative council of Canada. The forty-eight
councillors for Canada are to be chosen from the
present chamber. There are now thirty-four members from
the one section, and thirty-five from the other. I
believe that of the sixty-nine, some will not desire to
make their appearance here again; others, unhappily,
from years and infirmity, may not have strength to do so
; and there may be others who will not desire to qualify
under the statute. It is quite clear that when
twenty-four are selected for Upper Canada and
twenty-four for Lower Canada, very few indeed of the
present House will be excluded from the federal chamber
; and I confess I am not without hope that there may be
some way yet found of providing, for all who desire it,
an honourable position in the legislature of the
country. And after all, is it not an imaginary fear—that
of a deadlock? Is it at all probable that any body of
gentlemen who may compose the Upper House, appointed as
they will be for life, acting as they will do on
personal and not party responsibility, possessing as
they must a deep stake in the welfare of the country,
and desirous as they must be of holding the esteem of
their fellow-subjects, would take so unreasonable a
course as to imperil the whole political fabric? The
British House of Peers itself does not venture, à
l'outrance, to resist the popular will, and can it
be anticipated that our Upper Chamber would set itself
rashly against the popular will ? If any fear is to be
entertained in the matter, is it not rather that the
councillors will be found too thoroughly in harmony with
the popular feeling of the day? And we have this
satisfaction at any rate, that so far as its first
formation is concerned, so far as the present question
is concerned, we shall have a body of gentlemen in whom
every confidence may be placed.
But it is
objected that in the constitution of the Upper House, so
far as Lower Canada is concerned, the existing electoral
divisions are to be maintained, while, as regards Upper
Canada, they are to be abolished—that the members from
Lower Canada are to sit as representing the divisions
in which they reside or have their property
qualification ; while in Upper Canada there is no such
arrangement. Undoubtedly this is the fact ; it has been
so arranged to suit the peculiar position of this
section of the province. Our Lower Canada friends felt
that they had French Canadian interests and British
interests to be protected, and they conceived that the
existing system of electoral divisions would give
protection to these separate interests. We in Upper
Canada, on the other hand, were quite content that they
should settle that among themselves, and maintain their
existing divisions if they chose. But, so far as we In
the west were concerned, we had no such separate
interests to protect—we had no diversities of origin or
language to reconcile—and we felt that the true interest
of Upper Canada was that her very best men should be
sent to the legislative council, wherever they might
happen to reside or wherever their property was located.
If there is one evil in the American system which in my
mind stands out as pre-eminently its greatest defect,
except universal suffrage, it is that under that
constitution the representatives of the people must
reside in the constituencies for which they sit. The
result is that a public man, no matter what his talent
or what his position, no matter how necessary it may be
for the interest of the country that he should be in
public life, unless he happens to belong to the
political party popular for the time being in the
constituency where he resides, cannot possibly find a
seat in congress. And over and over again have we seen
the very best men of the republic, the most illustrious
names recorded in its political annals, driven out of
the legislature of their country, simply because the
majority in the electoral division in which they lived
was of a different political party from them. I do think
the British system infinitely better than that,
securing as it does that public men may be trained to
public life, with the assured conviction that if they
prove themselves worthy of public confidence, and gain a
position in the country, constituencies will always be
found to avail themselves of their services, whatever be
the political party to which they may adhere. You may
make politicians by the other, but assuredly this is the
way that statesmen are produced.
But it is
further objected that the property qualification of the
members of the Upper House from Prince Edward Island and
Newfoundland may be either real or personal estate,
while in the others it is to be real estate alone. This
is correct ; but I fancy it matters little to us upon
what species of property our friends in Prince Edward
Island or in Newfoundland base their qualification. In
Canada real estate is abundant ; every one can obtain it
; and it is admitted by all to be the best
qualification, if it be advisable to have any property
qualification at all. But in Newfoundland it would be
exceedingly inconvenient to enforce such a rule. The
public lands there are not even surveyed to any
considerable extent ; the people are almost entirely
engaged in fishing and commercial pursuits, and to
require a real estate qualification would be practically
to exclude some of its best public men from the
legislative council. Then in Prince Edward Island a
large portion of the island is held in extensive tracts
by absentee proprietors and leased to the settlers. A
feud of long standing has been the result, and there
would be some difficulty in finding landed proprietors
who would be acceptable to the people as members of the
Upper House. This also must be remembered, that it will
be a very different thing for a member from Newfoundland
or Prince Edward Island to attend the legislature at
Ottawa from what it is for one of ourselves to go there.
He must give up not only his time, but the comfort and
convenience of being near home ; and it is desirable to
throw no unnecessary obstacle in the way of our vetting
the very best men from these provinces.
But it is
further objected that these resolutions do not define
how the legislative councillors are to be chosen at
first. I apprehend, however, there is no doubt whatever
as regards that. Clause 14 says : “The first selection
of the members to constitute the federal legislative
council shall be made from the members of the now
existing legislative councils, by the Crown, at the
recommendation of the general executive government, upon
the nomination of the respective local governments.” The
clear meaning of this clause simply is, that the present
governments of the several provinces are to choose out
of the existing bodies—so far as they can find gentlemen
willing and qualified to serve—the members who shall at
starting compose the federal legislative council ; that
they are to present the names so selected to the
executive council of British America when
constituted—and on the advice of that body the
councillors will be appointed by the Crown. And such has
been the spirit shown from first to last in carrying out
the compact of July last by all the parties to it, that
I for one have no apprehension whatever that full
justice will not be done to the party which may be a
minority in the government, but it is certainly not in a
minority either in the country or in this House. I speak
not only of Upper Canada but of Lower Canada as well
HON. MR.
DORION : Ha! ha !
HON. MR.
BROWN : My honourable friend laughs, but I assure him,
and he will not say I do so for the purpose of deceiving
him, that having been present in conference and in
council, having heard all the discussions and well
ascertained the feelings of all associated with me, I
have not a shadow of a doubt on my mind that full
justice will be done in the selection of the first
federal councillors, not only to those who may have been
in the habit of acting with me, but also to those who
have acted with my honourable friend, the member for
Hochelaga.
Now, I believe I have
answered every objection that has come from any quarter
against the proposed constitution of the federal
legislature. I am persuaded there is not one
well-founded objection that can be urged against it. It
is just to all parties ; it remedies the gross injustice
of the existing system ; and I am convinced it will not
only work easily and safely, but he entirely
satisfactory to the great mass of our people. But I go
further ; I say that were all the objections urged
against this scheme sound and cogent, they sink into
utter insignificance in view of all the miseries this
scheme will relieve us from—in view of all the
difficulties that must surround any measure of
parliamentary reform for Canada that could possibly be
devised. Will honourable gentlemen who spend their
energies in hunting out blemishes in this scheme
remember for a moment the utter injustice of the one we
have at present? Public opinion has made rapid strides
in the last six months on the representation
question,—but think what it was a week before the
present coalition was formed ! Remember how short a time
has elapsed since the member for Peel (Hon. Mr. J.
Hillyard Cameron) proposed to grant one additional
member to Upper Canada, and could not carry even that.
Remember that but a few weeks ago the hon. member for
Hochelaga (Hon. Mr. Dorion), who now leads the crusade
against this measure, publicly declared that five or six
additional members was all Upper Canada was entitled to,
and that with these the Upper Canadians would be content
for many years to come. And when he has reflected on all
this, let the man who is disposed to carp at this great
measure of representative reform justify his conduct if
he can, to the thousands of disfranchised freeholders of
Upper Canada demanding justice at our hands. For myself,
I unhesitatingly say, that the complete justice which
this measure secures to the people of Upper Canada in
the vital matter of parliamentary representation alone,
renders all the blemishes averred against it utterly
contemptible in the balance.
But the
second feature of this scheme as a remedial measure is
that it removes to a large extent the injustice of which
Upper Canada has complained in financial matters. We in
Upper Canada have complained that though we paid into
the public treasury more than three-fourths of the whole
revenue, we had less control over the system of taxation
and the expenditure of the public moneys than the people
of Lower Canada. Well, the scheme in the Speaker's hand
remedies that. The absurd line of separation between
the provinces is swept away for general matters; we are
to have seventeen additional members in the House that
holds the purse; and the taxpayers of the country,
wherever they reside, will have their just share of
influence over revenue and expenditure. We have also
complained that immense sums of public money have been
systematically taken from the public chest for local
purposes of Lower Canada, in which the people of
Upper Canada
had no interest whatever, though compelled to contribute
three-fourths of the cash. Well, this scheme remedies
that. All local matters are to be banished from the
general legislature ; local governments are to have
control over local affairs, and if our friends in Lower
Canada choose to be extravagant they will have to bear
the burden of it them-selves. No longer shall we have to
complain that one section pays the cash while the other
spends it ; hereafter, they who pay will spend, and they
who spend more than they ought will have to bear the
brunt. It was a great thing to accomplish this, if we
had accomplished nothing more, for if we look back on
our doings of the last fifteen years I think it will be
acknowledged that the greatest jobs perpetrated were of
a local character, that our fiercest contests were about
local matters that stirred up sectional jealousies and
indignation to its deepest depth. We have further
complained that if a sum was properly demanded for some
legitimate local purpose in one section, an equivalent
sum had to be appropriated to the other as an offset,
thereby entailing prodigal expenditure, and
unnecessarily increasing the public debt. Well, this
scheme puts an end to that. Each province is to
determine for itself its own wants, and to find the
money to meet them from its own resources. But I am told
that though true it is that local matters are to be
separated and the burden of local expenditure placed
upon local shoulders, we have made an exception from
that principle in providing that a subsidy of eighty
cents per head shall be taken from the federal chest and
granted to the local governments for local purposes.
Undoubtedly this is the fact, and I do not hesitate to
admit that it would have been better if this had been
otherwise. I trust I commit no breach of discretion in
stating that in conference I was one of the strongest
advocates for defraying the whole of the local
expenditures of the local governments by means of direct
taxation, and that there were liberal men in all
sections of the provinces who would gladly have had it
so arranged. But there was one difficulty in the way—a
difficulty which has often before been encountered in
this world—and that difficulty was simply this, it could
not be done. We could neither have carried it in
conference nor yet in any one of the existing provincial
legislatures. Our friends in Lower Canada, I am afraid,
have a constitutional disinclination to direct taxation,
and it was obvious that if the confederation scheme had
had attached to it a provision for the imposition of
such a system of taxation, my honourable friends
opposite would have had a much better chance of success
in blowing the bellows of agitation than they now have.
The objection, moreover, was not confined to Lower
Canada—all the lower provinces stood in exactly the same
position. They have not a municipal system such as we
have, discharging many of the functions of government;
but their general government performs all the duties
which in Upper Canada devolve upon our municipal
councils, as well as upon parliament. If, then, the
lower provinces had been asked to maintain their customs
duties for federal purposes, and to impose on themselves
by the same Act direct taxation for all their local
purposes, the chances of carrying the scheme of union
would have been greatly lessened.
But I
apprehend that if we did not succeed in putting this
matter on the footing that would have been the best, at
least we did the next best thing. Two courses were open
to us—either to surrender to the local governments some
source of indirect revenue, some tax which the general
government proposed to retain, or collect the money by
the federal machinery, and distribute it, to the local
governments for local purposes. And we decided in favour
of the latter. We asked the representatives of the
different governments to estimate how much they would
require after the inauguration of the federal system to
carry on their local machinery. As at first presented to
us, the annual sum required for all the provinces was
something like five millions of dollars—an amount that
could not possibly have been allotted. The great trouble
was that some of the governments are vastly more
expensive than others—extensive countries, with sparse
populations, necessarily requiring more money per head
for local government than countries more densely
populated. But as any grant given from the common chest,
for local purposes, to one province, must be extended to
all, on the basis of population, it follows that for
every $1,000 given, for example, to New Brunswick, we
must give over $1,300 to Nova Scotia, $4,000 to Lower
Canada, and $6,000 to Upper Canada, thereby drawing from
the federal exchequer much larger sums than these
provinces needed for local purposes. The course we
adopted then was this : We formed a committee of finance
ministers, and made each of them go over his list of
expenditures, lopping off all unnecessary services and
cutting down every item to the lowest possible figure.
By this means we succeeded in reducing the total annual
subsidy required for local government to the sum of
$2,630,000—of which Lower Canada will receive annually
$880,000, and Upper Canada $1,120,000. But it is said
that in addition to her eighty cents per head under this
arrangement, New Brunswick is to receive an extra grant
from the federal chest of $63,000 annually for ten
years. Well, this is perfectly true. After cutting down
as I have explained the local expenditures to the lowest
mark, it was found that New Brunswick and Newfoundland
could not possibly carry on their local governments with
the sum per head that would suffice for all the rest.
New Brunswick imperatively required $63,000 per annum
beyond her share, and we had either to find that sum for
her or give up the hope of union. The question then
arose, would it not be better to give New Brunswick a
special grant of $63,000 for a limited number of years,
so that her local revenues might have time to be
developed, rather than increase the subsidy to all the
local governments, thereby placing an additional burden
on the federal exchequer of over eight hundred thousand
dollars per annum? We came unanimously to the conclusion
that the extra sum needed by New Brunswick was too small
to be allowed to stand in the way of union—we also
determined that it would be the height of absurdity to
impose a permanent burden on the country of $800,000 a
year, simply to escape a payment of $63,000 for ten
years—and so it came about that New Brunswick got this
extra grant—an arrangement which received, and receives
now, my hearty approval. It is only right to say,
however, that New Brunswick may possibly be in a
position to do without this money. The House is aware
that the federal government is to assume the debts of
the several provinces, each province being entitled to
throw upon it a debt of $25 per head of its population.
Should the debt of any province exceed $25 per head, it
is to pay interest on the excess to the federal treasury
; but should it fall below $25 per head, it is to
receive interest from the federal treasury on the
difference between its actual debt and the debt to which
it is entitled. Now, it so happens that the existing
debt of New Brunswick is much less than it is entitled
to throw on the federal government. It is, however,
under liability for certain works, which if proceeded
with would bring its debt up to the mark of $25 a head.
But if these works are not proceeded with, New Brunswick
will be entitled to a large amount of annual interest
from the federal chest, and that money is to be applied
to the reduction of the $63,000 extra grant. And this,
moreover, is not to be forgotten as regards New
Brunswick, that she brings into the union extensive
railways now in profitable operation, the revenues from
which are to go into the federal chest. A similar
arrangement was found necessary as regards the island of
Newfoundland—it, too, being a vast country with a sparse
population. It was found absolutely essential that an
additional grant beyond eighty cents per head should be
made to enable her local government to be properly
carried on. But, in consideration of this extra
allowance, Newfoundland is to cede to the federal
government her crown lands and minerals—and assuredly,
if the reports of geologists are well founded, this
arrangement will be as advantageous to us as it will be
to the inhabitants of Newfoundland.
I am
persuaded, then, that the House will feel with me that
we in Canada have very little to complain of in regard
to the subsidies for local government. But if a doubt
yet remains on the mind of any honourable member, let
him examine the trade returns of the several provinces,
and he will see that, from the large quantity of
dutiable goods consumed in the Maritime Provinces, they
have received no undue advantage under the arrangement.
Let this too ever be kept in mind, that the $2,630,000
to be distributed to the local governments from the
federal chest is to be in full and final extinguishment
of all claims hereafter for local purposes; and that if
this from any cause does not suffice, the local
governments must supply all deficiencies from a direct
tax on their own localities. And let honourable members
from Upper Canada who carp at this annual subsidy,
remember for a moment what we pay now, and they will
cease their grumbling. Of all the money raised by the
general government for local purposes in Canada, the
tax-payers of Upper Canada now pay more than
three-fourths ; but far from getting back in proportion
to what they con-tribute, or even in proportion to their
population, they do not get one-half of the money spent
for local purposes. But how different will it be under
federation ! Nine hundred thousand people will come into
the union, who will contribute to the revenue quite as
much, man for man, as the Upper Canadians, and in the
distribution of the local subsidy we will receive our
share on the basis of population—a very different
arrangement from that we now endure. I confess that one
of the strongest arguments in my mind for confederation
is the economical ideas of the people of these Maritime
Provinces, and the conviction that the influence of
their public men in our legislative halls will be most
salutary in all financial matters. A more economical
people it would be difficult to find ; their prime
ministers and their chief justices get but £600 a year,
Halifax currency, and the rest of their civil list is in
much the same proportion.
But there is
another great evil in our existing system that this
scheme remedies ; it secures to the people of each
province full control over the administration of their
own internal affairs. We in Upper Canada have complained
that the minority of our representatives, the party
defeated at the polls of Upper Canada, have been, year
after year, kept in office by Lower Canada votes, and
that all the local patronage of our section has been
dispensed by those who did not possess the confidence of
the people. Well, this scheme remedies that. The local
patronage will be under local control, and the wishes of
the majority in each section will be carried out in all
local matters. We have complained that the land system
was not according to the views of our western people;
that free lands for actual settlers was the right policy
for us; that the price of a piece of land squeezed out
of an immigrant was no consideration in comparison with
the settlement among us of a hardy and industrious
family ; and that the colonization road system was far
from satisfactory. Well, this scheme remedies that. Each
province is to have control of its own crown lands,
crown timber and crown minerals, and will be free to
take such steps for developing them as each deems best.
We have complained that local works of various
kinds—roads, bridges and landing piers, court houses,
gaols and other structures —have been erected in an
inequitable and improvident manner. Well, this scheme
remedies that ; all local works are to be constructed by
the localities and defrayed from local funds. And so on
through the whole extensive details of internal local
administration will this reform extend. The people of
Upper Canada will have the entire control of their local
matters, and will no longer have to betake themselves to
Quebec for leave to open a road, to select a county
town, or appoint a coroner. But I am told that to this
general principle of placing all local matters under
local control, an exception has been made in regard to
the common schools. The clause complained of is as
follows : “6. Education ; saving the rights and
privileges which the protestant or catholic minority in
both Canadas may possess as to their denominational
schools at the time when the union goes into operation.”
Now, I need hardly remind the House that I have always
opposed and continue to oppose the system of sectarian
education, so far as the public chest is concerned. I
have never had any hesitation on that point. I have
never been able to see why all the people of the
province, to whatever sect they may belong, should not
send their children to the same common schools to
receive the ordinary branches of instruction. I regard
the parent and the pastor as the best religious
instructors—and so long as the religious faith of the
children is uninterfered with, and ample opportunity
afforded to the clergy to give religious instruction to
the children of their flocks, I cannot conceive any
sound objection to mixed schools. But while in the
conference and elsewhere I have always maintained this
view, and always given my vote against sectarian public
schools, I am bound to admit, as I have always admitted,
that the sectarian system, carried to the limited extent
it has yet been in Upper Canada, and confined as it
chiefly is to cities and towns, has not been a very
great practical injury. The real cause of alarm was that
the admission of the sectarian principle was there, and
that at any moment it might be extended to such a degree
as to split up our school system altogether. There are
but a hundred separate schools in Upper Canada, out of
some four thousand, and all Roman Catholic. But if the
Roman Catholics are entitled to separate schools and to
go on extending their operations, so are the members of
the Church of England, the Presbyterians, the
Methodists, and all other sects. No candid Roman
Catholic will deny this for a moment ; and there lay the
great danger to our educational fabric, that the
separate system might gradually extend itself until the
whole country was studded with nurseries of
sectarianism, most hurtful to the best interests of the
province, and entailing an enormous expense to sustain
the hosts of teachers that so prodigal a system of
public instruction must inevitably entail.
Now, it is
known to every honourable member of this House that an
Act was passed in 1863, as a final settlement of this
sectarian controversy. I was not in Quebec at the time,
but if I had been here I would have voted against that
bill, because it extended the facilities for
establishing separate schools. It had, however, this
good feature, that it was accepted by the Roman Catholic
authorities, and carried through parliament as a final
compromise of the question in Upper Canada. When,
therefore, it was proposed that a provision should be
inserted in the confederation scheme to bind that
compact of 1863 and declare it a final settlement, so
that we should not be compelled, as we have been since
1849, to stand constantly to our arms, awaiting fresh
attacks upon our common school system, the proposition
seemed to me one that was not rashly to be rejected. I
admit that, from my point of view, this is a blot on the
scheme before the House; it is, confessedly, one of the
concessions from our side that had to be made to secure
this great measure of reform. But assuredly, I for one
have not the slightest hesitation in accepting it as a
necessary condition of the scheme of union, and doubly
acceptable must it be in the eyes of honourable
gentlemen opposite, who were the authors of the bill of
1863. But it was urged that though this arrangement
might perhaps be fair as regards Upper Canada, it was
not so as regards Lower Canada, for there were matters
of which the British population have long complained,
and some amendments to the existing School Act were
required to secure them equal justice.
Well, when
this point was raised, gentlemen of all parties in Lower
Canada at once expressed themselves prepared to treat it
in a frank and conciliatory manner, with a view to
removing any injustice that might be shown to exist ;
and on this understanding the educational clause was
adopted by the conference.
MR. T. C.
WALLBRIDGE : That destroys the power of the local
legislatures to legislate upon the subject.
HON. MR.
BROWN: I would like to know how much “power” the
honourable gentleman has now to legislate upon it ? Let
him introduce a bill to-day to annul the compact of 1863
and repeal all the sectarian School Acts of Upper
Canada, and how many votes would he get for it ? Would
twenty members vote for it out of the one hundred and
thirty who compose this House ? If the honourable
gentleman had been struggling for fifteen years, as I
have been, to save the school system of Upper Canada
from further extension of the sectarian element, he
would have found precious little diminution of power
over it in this very moderate compromise. And what says
the honourable gentleman to leaving the British
population of Lower Canada in the unrestricted power of
the local legislature ? The common schools of Lower
Canada are not as in Upper Canada—they are almost
entirely non-sectarian Roman Catholic schools. Does the
honourable gentleman, then, desire to compel the
protestants of Lower Canada to avail themselves of Roman
Catholic institutions, or leave their children without
instruction ? I am further in favour of this scheme
because it will bring to an end the sectional discord
between Upper and Lower Canada. It sweeps away the
boundary line between the provinces so far as regards
matters common to the whole people—it places all on an
equal level—and the members of the federal legislature
will meet at last as citizens of a common country. The
questions that used to excite the most hostile feelings
among us have been taken away from the general
legislature, and placed under the control of the local
bodies. No man need hereafter be debarred from success
in public life because his views, how-ever popular in
his own section, are unpopular in the other, for he will
not have to deal with sectional questions ; and the
temptation to the government of the day to make capital
out of local prejudices will be greatly lessened, if not
altogether at an end. What has rendered prominent
public men in one section utterly unpopular in the other
in past years ? Has it been our views on trade and
commerce—immigration—land settlement—the canal
system—the tariff—or any other of the great questions of
national interest? No; it was from our views as to the
applying of public money to local purposes—the allotment
of public lands to local purposes—the building of local
roads, bridges, and landing-piers with public funds—the
chartering of ecclesiastical institutions—the granting
of public money for sectarian purposes—the interference
with our school system—and similar matters, that the
hot feuds between Upper and Lower Canada have chiefly
arisen, and caused our public men, the more faithful
they were to the opinions and wishes of one section, to
be the more unpopular in the other. A most happy day
will it be for Canada when this bill goes into effect,
and all these subjects of discord are swept from the
discussion of our legislature.
I am further
in favour of this scheme as a remedial measure, because
it brings to an end the doubt that has so long hung over
our position, and gives a stability to our future in the
eyes of the world that could not otherwise have been
attained.
HON. MR.
HOLTON : Hear, hear !
MR. BROWN :
The hon. member for Chateauguay cries “hear, hear” in a
very credulous tone ; but the hon. member should be one
of the very last to express doubts on this point. Has he
not, for many years, admitted the absolute necessity of
constitutional changes, ere peace and prosperity could
be established in our land ? Has he not taken part in
the contests to obtain those changes ? Has he not
experienced the harsh and hostile feelings that have
pervaded this House and the whole country? And did he
not sign the report of my committee last session,
declaring a federal union to be the true solution of our
troubles, political and constitutional? And does the
honourable member think these matters were not well
known in the United States, and that the hope of our
annexation to the republic was not kept alive by them
from year to year ? Does he fancy that our discords and
discontent were not well known in Great Britain, and
that the capitalist and the emigrant were not influenced
by our distractions ? Does he fancy that people abroad,
as well as at home, did not perfectly under-stand that
Upper Canada would not much longer submit to the
injustice from which she suffered ; and that until the
future relations of the two sections were adjusted, no
one could predict safely what our future position might
be ? But when the measure before us has been
adopted—when justice has been done to both sections—when
all are placed on an equal footing—when the sectional
matters that rent us have been handed over to sectional
control—when sectional expenditure shall be placed on
sectional shoulders—will not a sense of security and
stability be inspired which we never before enjoyed, and
never could have enjoyed under existing circumstances?
Viewed then from a merely Canadian stand-point—viewed
solely as a remedial measure—I fearlessly assert that
the scheme in the Speaker's hands is a just and
satisfactory remedy for the evils and injustice that
have so long distracted the province ; and so strongly
do I feel this, that were every word of objection urged
against our union with the Maritime Provinces just and
true to the very letter, I would not hesitate to adopt
the union as the price of a measure of constitutional
reform in Canada so just and so complete as now
proposed. So far from the objections urged against union
with the Maritime Provinces being sound, so far from
union with them being a drawback to this measure, I
regard it as the crowning advantage of the whole
scheme. I make no pretension to having been in past
years an advocate of the immediate union of the British
American colonies. I always felt and always said that no
statesman could doubt that such was the best and almost
the certain future destiny of those colonies ; but I
doubted greatly whether the right time for the movement
had yet arrived. I knew little of the Maritime Provinces
or the feelings of their people ; the negotiations for a
union were likely to be difficult and long protracted ;
and I was unwilling to accept the hope of a measure so
remote and so uncertain in lieu of the practical remedy
for practical evils in Canada which we were earnestly
seeking to obtain, and which our own legislature had the
power immediately to grant. But of late all this has
been changed. The circumstances are entirely altered. A
revolution has occurred in Great Britain on the subject
of colonial relations to the parent state—the government
of the United States has become a great warlike
power—our commercial relations with the republic are
seriously threatened—and every man in British America
has now placed before him for solution the practical
question. What shall be done in view of the changed
relations on which we are about to enter ? Shall we
continue to struggle along as isolated communities, or
shall we unite cordially together to extend our
commerce, to develop the resources of our country, and
to defend our soil ? But more than this: many of us have
learned, since we last met here, far more of the
Maritime Provinces than we ever did before. We have
visited the Maritime Provinces—we have seen the
country—we have met the people and marked their
intelligence, their industry and their frugality—we have
investigated their public affairs and found them
satisfactory—we have discussed terms of union with their
statesmen, and found that no insuperable obstacle to
union exists, and no necessity for long delay. We come
to the consideration of the question to-day in a totally
different position from what we ever did before ; and if
the House will grant me its indulgence, I think I can
present unanswerable arguments to show that this union
of all British America should be heartily and promptly
accepted by all the provinces.
I am in
favour of a union of the British American colonies,
first, because it will raise us from the attitude of a
number of inconsiderable colonies into a great and
powerful people. The united population of Canada, Nova
Scotia, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Prince Edward
Island, is at this moment very close on four millions of
souls. Now, there are in Europe forty-eight sovereign
states, and out of that number there are only eleven
having a greater population than these colonies united,
while three of the eleven are so little ahead of us that
before the next census is taken, in 1871, we shall stand
equal in population to the ninth sovereign state of
Europe. Then the public revenues of the united provinces
for 1864 were $13,260,000, and their expenditures summed
up to $12,507,000. And large as these sums may appear,
it is satisfactory to know that the taxation of British
America—were there no reduction from present burdens,
which I am sure there will be—will be one-third less per
head than the taxation of England or France. There are
only five or six countries in Europe in which the
taxation is less than ours will be, and these, moreover,
are either petty principalities or states which do not
enjoy a very high degree of civilization.
Then, as
regards the imports and exports of the united provinces,
they summed up in 1863 to the following dimensions :
Imports, $70,600,963 ; exports, $66,846,604: total
trade, $137,447,567. Now, I should like honourable
gentlemen to notice this fact, that in 1793—long after
the United States had achieved their independence and
established a settled government—their exports and
imports did not amount to one-third what ours do at this
moment. There are few states in Europe, and those with a
vastly greater population than ours, that can boast of
anything like the extent of foreign commerce that now
passes through our hands.
Then, as to
our agricultural resources, I find that 45,638,854 acres
have passed from the governments of these colonies into
private hands, of which only 13,128,229 are yet tilled,
and 32,510,625 acres have still to be brought into
cultivation. The whole of these forty-five millions are
picked lands—most of them selected by the early settlers
in this country ; and if our annual agricultural
products are so great now, what will they be when the
thirty-two millions yet to pass under the plough have
been brought into cultivation? and what will they not he
when the vast tracts still held by government are
peopled with hardy settlers ? According to the census of
1861, the value of the agricultural productions of the
previous year in the united provinces of British America
was $120,000,000 ; and if we add to that the garden
products, and the improvements made on new lands by the
agricultural labourers of the provinces, it will be
found that the actual product of the industry of our
farmers in that year was $150,000,000. The assessed
value of our farms—which is always greatly less than the
real value—was $550,000,000 in the year 1861.
Then, in
regard to the minerals of the united provinces ; what
vast fields of profitable industry will we have in the
great coal beds of Nova Scotia, in the iron deposits
found all over the provinces, in the exhaustless copper
regions of Lakes Huron and Superior and the eastern
townships of Lower Canada, and in the gold mines of the
Chaudière and Nova Scotia. And if the mind stretches
from the western bounds of civilization through those
great north-western regions, which we hope ere long will
be ours, to the eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains,
what vast sources of wealth to the fur trader, the
miner, the gold hunter and the agriculturist, lie there
ready to be developed.
Nor can
another source of wealth he altogether forgotten. The
President of the United States is said recently to have
declared that the produce of the petroleum wells of the
United States will in half a dozen years pay off the
whole national debt of the republic. Well, we too have
“struck oil,” and every day brings us intelligence of
fresh discoveries, and if the enormous debt of our
neighbours may possibly be met by the oily stream, may
we not hope that some material addition to our annual
industrial revenue may flow from our petroleum regions?
Another vast
branch of British American industry is the timber and
lumber trade. In the year 1862 our saw-mills turned out
not less than 772,000,000 feet of manufactured lumber,
and our whole timber exports summed up to the value of
$15,000,000.
The
manufacturing interests of the provinces, too, are fast
rising into importance ; agricultural implement works,
woollen factories and cotton mills, tanneries and shoe
factories, iron works and rolling mills, flax works and
paper mills, and many other extensive and profitable
mechanical establishments are springing up among us, and
rapidly extending their operations. And to add to all,
we have already 2,500 miles of railway, 4,000 miles of
electric telegraph, and the noblest canal system in the
world, but which, I hope, will soon be infinitely
improved.
These are
some examples of the industrial spectacle British
America will present after the union has been
accomplished ; and I ask any member of this House to
say whether we will not, when thus united, occupy a
position in the eyes of the world, and command a degree
of respect and influence, that we never can enjoy as
separate provinces? Must it not affect the decision of
many an intending emigrant, when he is told not of the
fishing and mining pursuits of Nova Scotia, or of the
ship-building of New Brunswick, or of the timber trade
of Lower Canada, or of the agriculture of Upper Canada,
but when he is shown all these in one view, as the
collective industrial pursuits of British America ? I am
persuaded that this union will inspire new confidence in
our stability, and exercise the most beneficial
influence on all our affairs. I believe it will raise
the value of our public securities, that it will draw
capital to our shores, and secure the prosecution of all
legitimate enterprises ; and what I saw while in
England, a few weeks ago, would alone have convinced me
of this. Wherever you went you encountered the most
marked evidence of the gratification with which the
confederation scheme was received by all classes of the
people, and the deep interest taken in its success. Let
me state one fact in illustration. For some time
previous to November last our securities had gone
very low down in the market, in consequence, as my
honourable friend the Finance Minister explained the
other night, of the war raging on our borders, the
uncertainty which hung over the future of this province,
and the fear that we might be involved in trouble with
our neighbours. Our five per cent. debentures went down
in the market so low as 71, but they recovered from 71
to 75, I think, upon the day the resolutions for
confederation, which we are now discussing, reached
Lon-don. Well, the resolutions were published in the
London papers, with eulogistic editorial articles, and
the immediate effect of the scheme upon the public mind
was such that our five per cents, rose from 75 to 92.
HON. MR.
HOLTON : What has put them down since ?
HON. MR.
BROWN : I will presently tell the honourable gentleman
what has put them down since. But I say that, if
anything could show more clearly than another the effect
this union is to have on our position over the world, it
is a fact like this, that our securities went up 17 per
cent. in consequence of the publication of the details
of our scheme. The honourable member for Chateauguay
asks, “What put them down again?” I will tell him. They
remained at 91 or 92 until the news came that a raid had
been made from Canada into the United States, that the
raiders had been arrested and brought before a Canadian
court, and that upon technical legal grounds, not only
had they been set free, but the money of which they had
robbed the banks had been handed over to the robbers.
The effect of this news, coupled with General Dix's
order, was to drive down our securities 11 per cent.
almost in one day. But, as my honourable friend the
Finance Minister suggests, this is but an additional
proof of the accuracy of the argument I have been
sustaining—for this would not have happened, at all
events to the same extent, if all the provinces had been
united and prepared, as we are now proposing, not only
for purposes of commerce but for purposes of defence.
Secondly, I
go heartily for the union, because it will throw down
the barriers of trade and give us the control of a
market of four millions of people. What one thing has
contributed so much to the wondrous material progress of
the United States as the free passage of their products
from one state to another ? What has tended so much to
the rapid advance of all branches of their industry as
the vast extent of their home market, creating an
unlimited demand for all the commodities of daily use,
and stimulating the energy and ingenuity of producers ?
I confess that in my mind this one view of the union—the
addition of nearly a million of people to our home
consumers—sweeps aside all the petty objections that are
averred against the scheme. 'What, in comparison with
this great gain to our farmers and manufacturers, are
the fallacious money objections which the imaginations
of honourable gentlemen opposite have summoned up? All
over the world we find nations eagerly longing to extend
their domains, spending large sums and waging protracted
wars to possess themselves of more territory, untilled
and uninhabited. Other countries offer large
inducements to foreigners to emigrate to their
shores—free passages, free lands, and free food and
implements to start them in the world. We ourselves
support costly establishments to attract immigrants to
our country, and are satisfied when our annual outlay
brings us fifteen or twenty thousand souls. But here is
a proposal which is to add, in one day, nearly a million
souls to our population—to add valuable territories to
our domain, and secure to us all the advantages of a
large and profitable commerce now existing. And because
some of us would have liked certain of the little
details otherwise arranged, we are to hesitate in
accepting this alliance! Have honourable gentlemen
forgotten that the United States gladly paid twenty
millions in hard cash to have Louisiana incorporated in
the republic ? But what was Louisiana then to the
Americans in comparison with what the Maritime Provinces
are at this moment to Canada ? I put it to honourable
gentlemen opposite—if the United States were now to
offer us the state of Maine, what possible sum could be
named within the compass of our ability that we would
not be prepared to pay for that addition to our country?
If we were offered Michigan, Iowa or Minnesota, I would
like to know what sum, within the compass of Canada, we
would not be prepared to pay ? These states are portions
of a foreign country, but here is a people owning the
same allegiance as ourselves, loving the same old sod,
enjoying the same laws and institutions, actuated by the
same impulses and social customs ; and yet when it is
proposed that they shall unite with us for purposes of
commerce, for the defence of our common country, and to
develop the vast natural resources of our united
domains, we hesitate to adopt it! If a Canadian goes now
to Nova Scotia or New Brunswick, or if a citizen of
these provinces comes here, it is like going to a
foreign country. The customs officer meets you at the
frontier, arrests your progress, and levies his imposts
on your effects. But the proposal now before us is to
throw down all barriers between the provinces—to make a
citizen of one, citizen of the whole; the proposal is
that our farmers, and manufacturers and mechanics,
shall carry their wares unquestioned into every village
of the Maritime Provinces, and that they shall with
equal freedom bring their fish, and their coal, and
their West India produce to our three millions of
inhabitants. The proposal is, that the law courts, and
the schools, and the professional and industrial walks
of life, throughout all the provinces, shall be thrown
equally open to us all.
Thirdly, I am in favour of a
union of the provinces because—and I call the attention
of honourable gentlemen opposite to it—because it will
make us the third maritime state of the world. When this
union is accomplished, but two countries in the world
will be superior in maritime influence to British
America, and those are Great Britain and the United
States. In 1863, no fewer than 628 vessels were built in
British America, of which the aggregate tonnage was not
less than 230,312 tons. There were built in Canada, 158
vessels, with 67,209 tons ; Nova Scotia, 207 vessels,
with 46,862 tons; New Brunswick, 137 vessels, with
85,250 tons; Prince Edward Island, 100 vessels, with
24,991 tons ; Newfoundland, 26 vessels, with 6,000 tons;
total, 628 vessels, with 230,312 tons. Now, in 1861—the
year preceding the outbreak of the civil war—all the
vessels built in the United States, with their vast
seaboard and thirty millions of people, were in the
aggregate but 233,193 tons—only three thousand tons in
excess of the British American Provinces. And I hesitate
not to affirm that if the people of British America
unite cordially together in utilizing the singular
facilities we unitedly possess for the extension of the
shipping and ship-building interests, many years will
not elapse before we greatly surpass our neighbours in
this lucrative branch of industry.
HON. MR.
HOLTON : How much of the shipping built in that year do
we own now ?
HON. MR.
BROWN : How much of what the Americans built in 1861 do
they own now ? Why is my honourable friend so anxious to
decry the industry of his country ? If we have not the
ships it is because we sold them, and the money is in
our pockets, and we are ready to build more. In 1863 we
sold ships built by our mechanics to the large amount of
$9,000,000 in gold. But if my honourable friend from
Chateauguay will permit me, I am going on to
indoctrinate him upon the point of the ownership of
vessels
HON. MR.
HOLTON : Don't !
HON. MR.
BROWN : Ah ! my honourable friend does not require to be
instructed ; well, will he tell us how many tons of
shipping are now owned by British America?
HON. MR.
HOLTON : I am aware that most of the vessels my
honourable friend speaks of, and the building of which
he cites as a proof that we will be a great maritime
power, were sold abroad. Building ships is a good thing,
and selling them is a better, but that does not prove us
to be a great maritime power.
HON. MR.
BROWN : My honourable friend cannot eat his cake and
have it too, If we got $9,000,000 for a portion of the
ships we built in 1863, it is clear we cannot own them
also. It did not require a man of great wisdom to find
out that. But I was going on to show the amount of
shipping that was owned in these provinces. I hold in my
hand a statement of the vessels owned and registered in
British America, made up to the latest dates, and I find
that the provinces unitedly own not fewer than 8,530
vessels, with an aggregate tonnage of not less than
952,246 tons.
HON. MR.
HOLTON : Sea-going ?
HON. MR.
BROWN : Sea-going and inland.
HON. MR.
HOLTON (ironically) : Hear, hear !
HON. MR.
BROWN : Why is my honourable friend so anxious to
depreciate ? Is it then so deplorable a thing to own
inland vessels ? None knows better than my honourable
friend when to buy and when to sell—and yet, I greatly
mistake if there was not a time when my honourable
friend thought it not so bad a thing to be the owner of
ships and steamers on our inland seas. Am I wrong in
believing that my honourable friend laid the foundation
of his well-merited fortune in the carrying trade of the
lakes ? and is it for him, from momentary partisanship,
to depreciate such an important branch of national
industry? What matters where the ship floats, if she is
a good and a sound ship ?—and the inland tonnage
includes so many steamers, that in value it will compare
favourably with that of the sea-going. On the 31st
December, 1864, Canada owned 2,311 vessels, of 287,187
tons; in 1863, Nova Scotia owned 3,539 vessels, of
309,554 tons; New Brunswick, 891 vessels, of 211,680
tons; Prince Edward Island, 360 vessels, of 34,222 tons
; Newfoundland, 1,429 vessels, of 89,603 tons ; total,
8,530 vessels, of 932,246 tons. Now, it is quite true
that the United States have a much larger commercial
navy than this, and Great Britain a vastly larger one ;
but it is equally true that the country next to them in
importance is France, and that notwithstanding her
thirty-five millions of people, large foreign trade, and
extensive sea-coast, she owns but 60,000 tons of
shipping more than British America. In 1860, the
aggregate commercial navy of France was but 996,124
tons. I say, then, that even as ship-owners the British
American confederacy will occupy from the first a proud
place among the maritime states of the world, and that
when her ships hoist a distinctive flag alongside the
Cross of Red, there will be few seas in which it will
not be unfurled. And let me here mention a fact which
came under my notice while recently in the Lower
Provinces—a fact of great importance, and from which, I
think, we, who are more inland, may well profit. I
learned that, as in the British isles, a system of
joint-stock ship-building has been spreading over many
parts of the Maritime Provinces. Ships are built and
owned in small shares—say in sixteenth, thirty-second,
or sixty-fourth parts, and all classes of the people are
taking small ventures in the trade. Most of the ships so
built are sold, but a portion, and an increasing portion
every year, are sailed, and sailed with profit, by the
original joint-stock holders. I was delighted to be told
that some of those clipper vessels which we often hear
of as making wonderful trips from China and India and
Australia to British ports, are vessels built and owned
in New Brunswick, under this joint-stock system. So much
for the building and ownership of ships ; now let me
show you what will be the strength of the united
provinces in seafaring men. By the census of 1861, it
appears that the number of sailors and fishermen then in
Canada was 5,958; in Nova Scotia, 19,637; in New
Brunswick, 2,765; in Prince Edward Island, 2,318; in
Newfoundland, 38,578; total, 69,256. Whether regarded
merely as a lucrative branch of industry, or as
affecting our maritime position before the world, or as
a bulwark of defence in time of need, this one fact that
British America will have a combined force of 70,000
seamen, appears to me an immense argument in favour of
the union. And let us look at the products of the labour
of a portion of these men—the fishermen. From the latest
returns I have been able to meet with, I find the joint
products of our sea-coasts and inland lakes were, in the
years named, estimated at the following values: Upper
Canada (1859), $380,000; Lower Canada (1862), $703,895;
Nova Scotia (1861), $2,072,081; New Brunswick (1861),
$518,530; Newfoundland (1861), $6,347,730; total,
$10,022,236. I was unable to find any estimate as
regards Prince Edward Island, but fancy the amount there
must be about $200,000. But be this as it may, so
valuable a fishing trade as this of the united provinces
does not exist in any part of the world. And no doubt
these estimates are far under the fact, as a large
portion of the delicious food drawn by our people from
the sea and inland waters could not possibly be included
in the returns of the fishery inspectors. And let us
observe, for a moment, the important part played by this
fishing industry in the foreign commerce of the
provinces. The exports of products of the sea in the
year 1863 were as follows : From Canada, $789,913; Nova
Scotia, $2,390,661; New Brunswick (1862), $303,477;
Newfoundland, $4,090,970; Prince Edward Island,
$121,000; total exports, $7,696,021. Add to this,
$9,000,000 received in the same year for new ships, and
we have $16,696,021 as one year's foreign exports of our
ship-building and fishing interests. With such facts
before us as the result of only a partially developed
traffic, may we not fearlessly look forward to the
future in the confident hope of still more gratifying
results, when, by combined and energetic action, a new
impetus has been given to these valuable branches of
industry?
But there
remains a still more singular comparison to be made. I
refer to the statement of ships
annually entering and leaving our ports. Of course every
one comprehends that a large amount of the tonnage
entering and leaving ports on the upper lakes is
repeated in the returns over and over again. This is the
case, for instance, with the ferry boats between the
American and Canadian shores that carry passengers and a
small quantity of goods. It would be unfair to put down
the tonnage of such boats, every time they enter or
leave a port, as foreign commerce. Still there is a
large amount of valuable shipping engaged in the inland
trade, and a vast amount of freight is carried between
the countries ; and the only just plan is to state
separately that which is sea-going shipping and that
which is inland. Acting on this plan, I find that in
1863, the tonnage between Canada and foreign ports was
as follows:
Inwards.
Outwards. Total.
Canada
......................... 1,041,309 1.091,895
2,133,204
Nova Scotia
...................... 712,939 719,915
1,432,854
New
Brunswick ................. 659,258 727,727
1,386,985
P. E. Island
(1862) ............... 69,080 81,208
150,288
Newfoundland
................... 156,578 148,610 305,188
2,639,164
2,769,355 5,408,519
Inland
Navigation.
Canada .......................... 3,538,701
3,368,432 6,907,133
Total tons
....... 6,177,865 6,137,787
12,315,652
Now, the
United States are in the sane position as we are in
respect to this inland traffic, and they include it in
their returns as is done here. And what do you think is
the difference between their tonnage and ours? Why, ours
is over twelve millions and theirs is but sixteen
millions. There are not four millions of tons of
difference between the two. And let it be recollected
that the United States have had seventy years start of
us. As regards France, the whole amount of shipping that
entered and left the ports of that great country in one
year was but 8,456,734 tons—four millions of tons less
than that of the British American Provinces. May we not
then, when this union is accomplished, fairly claim to
be the third maritime state of the world ; and may we
not even entertain the hope that, at some future day, a
still higher position is not beyond our reach, when the
days of puberty have been passed and the strength of
manhood has been reached ? I ask honourable gentlemen,
in looking at these figures, to consider what the effect
must be when they are set down thus collectively, side
by side, in official commercial returns, in comparison
with the commerce of all the great maritime states? Will
it not strengthen our position abroad ? will it not give
us a degree of influence and importance to have it known
that British America wields so large a share of the
world's commerce? And if honourable gentlemen will still
further consider the deep importance to Canada, in her
inland position, of exercising her just influence in the
control of so valuable a maritime interest, I think they
will come to the conclusion that all the objections
urged against this union are, in the balance of its
advantages, utterly contemptible.
In the
fourth place, I go for a union of the provinces, because
it will give a new start to immigration into our
country. It will bring us out anew prominently before
the world—it will turn earnest attention to our
re-sources, and bring to our shores a stream of
immigration greater, and of a better class, than we ever
had before. I was in England when the first public
announcement of this scheme was made, and witnessed,
with pleasure, the marked impression it produced. You
could not go abroad, you could not enter into any
company, in any class of society, where Canada or the
British American Provinces were mentioned, but you heard
this union movement spoken of almost with enthusiasm.
And I say that it is desirable that this scheme should
not be delayed, but be carried through promptly and
vigorously. I hesitate not to say that it should be
accomplished with a vigorous effort to give a new
impetus to our industrial enterprises, to open up fresh
lands for settlement, and to cheapen the transport of
our produce to the sea-board. With the consummation of
this union, I trust we will have a new immigration and a
new land settlement policy—that we will ascertain every
lot of land we actually own, so that a printed list may
be placed in the hands of every immigrant—that the petty
price we have been heretofore exacting will no longer be
exacted, but that to actual settlers, who come among us
to hew out for themselves and their children homes in
the forest, no burthen or condition will be demanded,
beyond resident occupation for a certain number of
years, and a fixed amount of improvement on the land.
HON. MR,
HOLTON : Unfortunately for your argument, the lands will
be in the hands of the local governments.
HON. MR.
BROWN : So much the better. My honourable friend can
manage his public lands in Lower Canada as he likes, and
we will manage ours. And, speaking for the western
section, I am bound to say there are very few shrewd men
in Upper Canada who do not feel that far more public
benefit is to be gained from the industry of a hardy
actual settler upon 100 acres of land given to him free,
than the trumpery $150 that can be squeezed out of him
as its price, the payment of which keeps him in trouble
perhaps for years, and retards the progress of the
country. On this question of immigration turns, in my
opinion, the whole future success of this great scheme
which we are now discussing. Why, there is hardly a
political and financial or social problem suggested by
this union that does not find its best solution in a
large influx of immigration. The larger our population,
the greater will be our productions, the more valuable
our exports, and the greater our ability to develop the
resources of our country. The greater the number of
tax-payers, and the more densely they are settled, the
more lightly will the burden of taxation fall upon us
all. And in this question of immigration is found the
only true solution of the problem of defence. Fill up
our vacant lands, double our population, and we will at
once be in a position to meet promptly and effectually
any invader who may put his foot with hostile intent
upon our soil.
And this
question of immigration naturally brings me to the great
subject of the North-West Territories. The resolutions
before us recognize the immediate necessity of those
great territories being brought within the confederation
and opened up for settlement. But I am told that, while
the Intercolonial Railroad has been made an absolute
condition of the compact, the opening up of the great
west and the enlargement of our canals have been left in
doubt. Now, nothing can be more unjust than this. Let me
read the resolutions :
“The general
government shall secure, without delay, the completion
of the Intercolonial Railway from Riviere du Loup,
through New Brunswick to Truro, in Nova Scotia,
“The
communications with the North-Western Territory, and the
improvements required for the development of the trade
of the great west with the seaboard, are regarded by
this conference as subjects of the highest importance to
the federated provinces, and shall be prosecuted at the
earliest possible period that the state of the finances
will permit."
The
confederation is, therefore, clearly committed to the
carrying out of both these enterprises. I doubt if there
was a member of the conference who did not consider
that the opening up of the north-west and the
improvement of our canal system, were not as clearly for
the advantage of the Lower Provinces as for the
interests of Upper Canada. Indeed, one gentleman held
that the Lower Provinces were more interested—they
wished to get their products into the west, they wanted
a back country as much as we did, they wanted to be the
carriers for that great country —and they were,
therefore, to say the least, as much interested in these
questions as we were. But honourable gentlemen lay
stress upon the point that, while the one enterprise is
to be undertaken at once, the other is not to be
commenced until the state of the finances will permit.
No doubt this is correct, and the reason for it is
simply this: The money has already been found for the
Intercolonial Railway. They must be well aware that the
late government (the Macdonald-Sicotte administration)
agreed to build the Intercolonial Railway, and obtained
from the Imperial government a guarantee of the
debentures for building it, so that that money is ready,
at a very low rate of interest, whenever required. We
know where to find the money for one enterprise at a
rate we are able to bear, and can thus at once goon with
a work which must be gone on with if this union is to be
consummated. But we don't know this of the other great
work ; and we all felt that it would be exceedingly
indiscreet—I, myself, as the special advocate of opening
up the great west and of the enlargement of our canals,
felt that I could not put my name to a document which
declared that at all hazards, while our five per cent.
debentures were quoted at 75 or 80 per cent. in the
money market, we would commence at once, without an
hour's delay, any great public work whatever. Honourable
gentlemen opposite must not imagine that they have to do
with a set of tricksters in the thirty-three gentlemen
who composed that conference. What we have said in our
resolutions was deliberately adopted, in the honest
sense of the words employed, and not for purposes of
deception. Both works are to go on at the earliest
possible moment our finances will permit, and honourable
gentlemen will find the members of the cabinet, from
Lower as well as from Upper Canada, actuated by the
hearty desire to have this whole scheme carried out in
its fair meaning.
When
recently in England, I was charged to negotiate with the
Imperial government for the opening up of the
North-West Territories. In a few days the papers will he
laid before the House, and it will then be seen whether
or not this government is in earnest in that matter. The
gentlemen who formed the conference at Quebec did not
enter upon their work with the miserable idea of getting
the advantage of each other, but with a due sense of the
greatness of the work they had on hand, with an earnest
desire to do justice to all, and keeping always in mind
that what would benefit one section in such a union must
necessarily benefit the whole. It has always appeared to
me that the opening up of the north-west ought to be one
of the most cherished projects of my honourable friends
from Lower Canada. During the discussion on the question
for some years back I had occasion to dip deep in
north-west lore—into those singularly interesting
narratives of life and travels in the north-west in the
olden time, and into the history of the struggles for
commercial dominancy in the great fur-bearing regions ;
and it has always struck me that the French Canadian
people have cause to look back with pride to the bold
and successful part they played in the adventures of
those days. Nothing perhaps has tended more to create
their present national character than the vigorous
habits, the power of endurance, the aptitude for
out-door life, acquired in their prosecution of the
north-west fur trade. Well may they look forward with
anxiety to the realization of this part of our scheme,
in confident hope that the great north-western traffic
shall be once more opened up to the hardy French
Canadian traders and voyageurs. Last year furs
to the value of £280,000 stg. ($1,400,000) were carried
from that territory by the Hudson's Bay
Company—smuggled off through the ice-bound regions of
James' Bay—that the pretence of the barrenness of the
country, and the difficulty of conveying merchandise by
the natural route of the St. Lawrence, may be kept up a
little longer. The carrying of merchandise into that
country, and bringing down the bales of pelts ought to
be ours, and must ere long be ours, as in the days of
yore ; and when the fertile plains of that great
Saskatchewan territory are opened up for settlement and
cultivation, I am confident that it will not only add
immensely to our annual agricultural products, but bring
us sources of mineral and other wealth on which at
present we do not reckon.
While
speaking on this question of immigration, I would remind
the House, and it is impossible to urge it too strongly,
that these provinces are now presented to the world in a
very disadvantageous aspect, as different communities.
When a party in Europe thinks of emigrating here, he has
to ascertain separately all about New Brunswick, and
Prince Edward Island, and Nova Scotia, and Upper and
Lower Canada, and if by chance he meets a party from
some one of these provinces, he has to listen to a
picture of the merits of that one section in high
contrast to the demerits of all the rest, and the result
is the poor man's ideas about us become a mass of
confusion. On the other hand, if he seeks to know the
inducements for emigration to New South Wales or New
Zealand, he gets it in one picture—in an official
form—and the offer is made to pay his passage to these
lands of hope. A large amount of emigration, and of
money which the emigrant takes with him, are thus
carried off to a much more distant land than this, and
one that does not offer equal inducements to the
settler. But how different will all this be when these
provinces stand united, and present to emigrants a
combination of so many branches of profitable industry?
In turning over some United States statistics, I
recently fell upon a very curious official calculation,
made by the United States government, as to the value of
immigration. By the census of 1861 the population of the
United States was over thirty millions ; and this
calculation was to ascertain what the population would
have been had there been no immigration into the
country, but the population had been left to advance
solely by its own natural increase. And what do you
think was the result ? Why, it is shown that if the
United States had received all the immigrants that came
to them up to 1820, and then stopped receiving them, the
population, at this moment, instead of 30,000,000, would
have been but 14,601,485. It is shown that if
immigration had gone on until 1810, and stopped then,
the population now would have been only 12,678,562. Had
it stopped in 1800, the population now would have been
10,462,944 ; and had it stopped in 1790, the population
now, instead of 30,000,000, would have been but
8,789,969. These are most valuable facts, which should
be impressed on the mind of every public man in British
America. If we wish our country to progress, we should
not leave a single stone unturned to attract the tide of
emigration in this direction ; and I know no better
method of securing that result, than the gathering into
one of these five provinces, and presenting ourselves
to the world in the advantageous light which, when
united, we
would occupy.
Fifthly, I
am in favour of a union of these provinces, because it
will enable us to meet, without alarm, the abrogation of
the American reciprocity treaty, in case the United
States should insist on its abolition. I do not believe
that the American government is so insane as to repeal
that treaty. But it is always well to be prepared for
contingencies ; and I have no hesitation in saying that
if they do repeal it, should this union of British
America go on, a fresh outlet for our commerce will be
opened up to us quite as advantageous as the American
trade has ever been. I have never heretofore ventured to
make this assertion, for I know well what a serious task
it is to change, in one day, the commercial relations of
such a country as this. When the traffic of a country
has passed for a lengthened period through a particular
channel, any serious change of that channel tends, for a
time, to the embarrassment of business men, and causes
serious injury to individuals, if not the whole
community. Such a change we in Canada had in 1847. But
as it was in 1847, so it will be in 1866, if the
reciprocity treaty is abolished. Our agricultural
interest had been built up on the protective legislation
of Great Britain, and in 1847 it was suddenly brought to
an end. We suffered severely, in consequence, for some
years ; but by degrees new channels for our trade opened
up—the reciprocity treaty was negotiated—and we have
been more prosperous since 1847 than we ever were
before. And so, I have not a doubt, will it be in the
event of the reciprocity treaty being abolished.
Profitable as that treaty has unquestionably been to
us—and it has been more profit-able to the
Americans—still, were it brought to an end to-morrow,
though we would suffer a while from the change, I am
convinced the ultimate result would be that other
foreign markets would be opened to us quite as
profitable, and that we would speedily build up our
trade on a sounder basis than at present. A close
examination of the working of the reciprocity treaty
discloses facts of vital importance to the merits of the
question, to which you never hear the slightest
allusion made by American speakers or writers. Our
neighbours, in speaking of the treaty, keep constantly
telling us of the Canadian trade—what they take from
Canada and what Canada takes from them. Their whole
story is about the buying and selling of commodities in
Canada. Not a whisper do you ever hear from them about
their buying and selling with the Maritime Provinces—not
a word about the enormous carrying trade for all the
provinces which they monopolize—not a word of the large
sums drawn from us for our vast traffic over their
railways and canals—and not a whisper as to their
immense profits from fishing in our waters, secured to
them by the treaty. No ; all we hear of is the exports
and imports of Canada—all is silence as to other parts
of the treaty. But it must not be forgotten that if the
treaty is abolished and this union is accomplished, an
abolition of reciprocity with Canada means abolition of
reciprocity with all the British American
provinces—means bringing to an end the right of the
Americans to fish in our waters ; their right to use our
canals ; their right to the navigation of the St.
Lawrence ; and that it also implies the taking out of
their hands the vast and lucrative carrying trade they
now have from us. It must be always kept in mind that
though the United States purchase from Canada a large
amount of agricultural products, a great portion of what
they purchase does not go into consumption in the
states, but is merely purchased for transmission to
Great Britain and the West India markets. They merely
act as commission agents and carriers in such
transactions, and splendid profits they make out of the
business. But beyond this, another large portion of
these produce purchases, for which they take so much
credit to themselves, they buy in the same manner for
export to the Maritime Provinces of British America,
reaping all the benefit of the sea-going as well as the
inland freight—charges and commissions. The commercial
returns of the Lower Provinces show not only that the
Americans send a large quantity of their own farm
products to those provinces, but a considerable amount
of what they (the Americans) receive from us, thereby
gaining the double advantage of the carrying trade
through the United States to the seaboard, and then by
sea to the Lower Provinces. I hold in my hand a return
of the articles purchased by the Maritime Provinces from
the United States in 1863, which Canada could have
supplied. I will not detain the House by reading it, but
any member who desires can have it for examination. I
may state, however, in brief, that in that year the
breadstuffs alone bought by the Lower Provinces amounted
to no less than $4,447,207; that the import of meats,
fresh and cured, amounted to$659,917; and that the total
value of products which the Lower Provinces might have
bought more advantageously from us, summed up to over
seven millions of dollars. The Americans must therefore
bear in mind, that if they abolish the reciprocity
treaty, they will not only lose that seven millions
which they now receive for their products, but the
carrying trade which goes with it. But, on the other
hand, when we have this union, these products will, as
they naturally should, go down the St. Lawrence, not
only for the advantage of our farmers, but swelling the
volume of our own shipping interests. The Americans
hitherto have had a large portion of our carrying trade
; they have brought us our goods—even our European
goods—and taken our produce not only to Europe but even
to the Lower Provinces ; and I say one of the best
features of this union is, that if in our commercial
relations with the United States we are compelled by
them to meet fire with fire, it will enable us to stop
this improvidence, and turn the current of our own trade
into our own waters. Far be it from me to say I am an
advocate of a coercive commercial policy; on the
contrary, entire freedom of trade, in my opinion, is
what we in this country should strive for. Without
hesitation, I would, to-morrow, throw open the whole of
our trade and the whole of our waters to the United
States, if they did the same to us. But if they tell us,
in the face of all the advantages they get by
reciprocity, that they are determined to put a stop to
it, and if this is done through a hostile feeling to
us—deeply as I should regret that this should be the
first use made by the northern states of their new-found
liberty—then, I say, we have a policy, and a good
policy, of our own to fall back upon. And let me say a
word as to the effect of the repeal of reciprocity on
the American fishing interest. The Americans, in 1851,
had engaged in the cod and mackerel fishing, in our
waters, shipping to the extent of 129,014 tons ; but
under the influence of the reciprocity treaty it rose,
in 1861, to 192,662—an increase, in ten years, of
upwards of 63,000 tons, or fifty per cent. The repeal of
reciprocity will give us back all this increase, and
more, for it will he a very different thing in the
future from what it was formerly to poach on our fishing
grounds, when these provinces are united and determined
to protect the fisheries of the gulf. This fishing
interest is one which may be cultivated to an extent
difficult, perhaps, for many of us to conceive. But we
have only to look at the amount of fish taken from our
waters by the Americans and other nations, and the
advantages we possess, to perceive that if we apply
ourselves, as a united people, to foster that trade, we
can vastly increase the great traffic we now enjoy. On
the whole, then, I come firmly to the conclusion that,
in view of the possible stoppage of the American
reciprocity treaty, and our being compelled to find new
channels for our trade, this union presents to us
advantages, in comparison with which any objection that
has been offered, or can be offered to it, is utterly
insignificant.
Sixthly, I
am in favour of the union of the provinces, because, in
the event of war, it will enable all the colonies to
defend themselves better, and give more efficient aid to
the empire, than they could do separately. I am not one
of those who ever had the war-fever ; I have not
believed in getting up large armaments in this country ;
I have never doubted that a military spirit, to a
certain extent, did necessarily form part of the
character of a great people ; but I felt that Canada had
not yet reached that stage in her progress when she
could safely assume the duty of defence ; and that, so
long as peace continued and the mother country threw her
shield around us, it was well for us to cultivate our
fields and grow in numbers and material strength, until
we could look our enemies fearlessly in the face. But it
must be admitted—and there is no use of closing our eyes
to the fact—that this question of defence has been
placed, within the last two years, in a totally
different position from what it ever occupied before.
The time has come—it matters not what political party
may be in power in England—when Britain will insist on a
reconsideration of the military relations which a great
colony, such as Canada, ought to hold to the empire. And
I am free to admit that it is a fair and just demand. We
may doubt whether some of the demands that have been
made upon us, without regard to our peculiar position at
the moment, and without any attempt to discuss the
question with us in all its breadth, were either just or
well considered. But of this I think there can be no
doubt, that when the time comes in the history of any
colony that it has overcome the burdens and
embarrassments of early settlement, and has entered on a
career of permanent progress and prosperity, it is only
fair and right that it should contribute its quota to
the defence of the empire. What that quota ought to be,
I think, is a matter for grave deliberation and
discussion, as well as the measure of assistance the
colony may look for, in time of war, from the parent
state ; and assuredly, it is in this spirit that the
present Imperial government is desirous of approaching
the question. I am persuaded that nothing more than that
which is fairly due at our hands will be demanded from
us, and anything less than this, I am sure, the people
of Canada do not desire. In the conversations I had,
while in England, with public men of different politics,
while I found many who considered that the connection
between Canada and England involved the mother country
in some danger of war with the powerful state upon our
borders, and that the colonial system devolved heavy and
unreasonable burdens upon the mother country, and while
a still larger number thought we had not acted as
cordially and energetically as we ought in organizing
our militia for the defence of the province, still I did
not meet one public man, of any stripe of politics, who
did not readily and heartily declare that, in case of
the invasion of Canada, the honour of Great Britain
would be at stake, and the whole strength of the empire
would be unhesitatingly marshalled in our defence. But,
coupled with this, was the invariable and most
reasonable declaration that a share of the burden of
defence, in peace and in war, we must contribute. And
this stipulation applies not only to Canada, but to
every one of the colonies. Already the Indian empire has
been made to pay the whole expense of her military
establishment. The Australian colonies have agreed to
pay £40 sterling per man for every soldier sent there.
This system is being gradually extended; and, union or
no union, assuredly every one of these British American
colonies will be called upon to bear her fair share
towards the defence of the empire. And who will deny
that it is a just demand, and that great colonies such
as these should be proud to meet it in a frank and
earnest spirit. Nothing, I am persuaded, could be more
foreign to the ideas of the people of Canada, than that
the people of England should be unfairly taxed for
service rendered to this province. Now, the question
presented to us is simply this : Will these
contributions which Canada and the other provinces must
hereafter make to the defence of the empire be better
rendered by a hardy, energetic population, acting as one
people, than as five or six separate communities ? There
is no doubt about it. But not only do our changed
relations towards the mother country call on us to
assume the new duty of military defence —our changed
relations towards the neighbouring republic compel us to
do so. For myself, I have no belief that the Americans
have the slightest thought of attacking us. I cannot
believe that the first use of their new-found liberty
will be the invasion, totally unprovoked, of a peaceful
province. I fancy that they have had quite enough of
war for a good many years to come, and that such a war
as one with England would certainly be is the last they
are likely to provoke. There is no better mode of
warding off war when it is threatened than to be
prepared for it if it comes. The Americans are now a
warlike people. They have large armies, a powerful navy,
an unlimited supply of warlike munitions, and the
carnage of war has to them been stript of its horrors.
The American side of our lines already bristles with
works of defence, and unless we are willing to live at
the mercy of our neighbours, we too must put our country
in a state of efficient preparation. War or no war, the
necessity of placing these provinces in a thorough state
of defence can no longer be postponed. Our country is
coming to be regarded as undefended and indefensible—the
capitalist is alarmed, and the immigrant is afraid to
come among us. Were it merely as a measure of commercial
advantage, every one of these colonies must meet the
question of military defence promptly and energetically.
And how can we do this so efficiently and economically
as by the union now proposed ? I have already shown that
union would give us a body of 70,000 hardy seamen ready
and able to defend our sea-coasts and inland lakes; let
us now see what would be the military strength of the
confederation. By the last census (1861) it appears that
the men (from 20 to 60 years of age) capable of bearing
arms in British America, were as follows : Upper Canada,
308,955 ; Lower Canada, 225,620 ; Nova Scotia, 67,367 ;
New Brunswick, 51,625; Newfoundland, 25,532; Prince
Edward Island (from 21 to 60 years of age), 14,819 ;
total, 693,918. With the body of efficient soldiers that
might be obtained from this vast array of men, the
erection of defensive works at salient points, and the
force of British troops that would soon come to our aid,
who can doubt that the invasion of our country would be
successfully resisted ?
Seventhly, I
am in favour of this union because it will give us a
sea-board at all seasons of the year. It is not to be
denied that the position of Canada, shut off as she is
from the sea-board during the winter months, is far from
satisfactory; and should the United States carry out
their in-sane threat of abolishing the bonding system,
by which our merchandise passes free through their
territory, it would be still more embarrassing. The
Maritime Provinces are equally cut off from
communication inland. Now, this embarrassment will be
ended by colonial union. The Intercolonial Railway will
give us at all times access to the Atlantic through
British territory. As a commercial enterprise, the
Intercolonial Railway has not, I apprehend, any
considerable merit ; as a work of defence it has,
however, many advocates ; but if the union of the
provinces is to go on, it is an absolute necessity ; and
as the price of union, were there no other argument in
its favour, I heartily go for it. The advantage it will
confer on the Maritime Provinces can hardly be
overrated. It will make Halifax and St. John the
Atlantic seaports of half a continent ; it will insure
to Halifax, ere long, the establishment of a line of
powerful steamers running in six days from her wharves
to some near point on the west coast of Ireland; and it
will bring a constant stream of passengers and
immigrants through those lower provinces that never
otherwise would come near them.
I could go
on for many hours piling up arguments in favour of this
scheme, but already I have detained the House too long,
and must draw to a close. But I think I have given
reasons enough to satisfy every candid man who desires
the advancement of his country, why this House should go
unanimously and enthusiastically for “the union, the
whole union, and nothing but the union !” Before sitting
down, however, there are one or two general objections
urged against the scheme which I am desirous of meeting,
and I will try to do so as briefly as possible. And
first, I am told that we should have made the union
legislative and not federal. Undoubtedly this is a
point on which different opinions may be honestly held
by men sincerely seeking the same ends ; but, speaking
my own views, I think we came to a most wise conclusion.
Had we continued the present legislative union, we must
have continued with it the unjust system of taxation for
local purposes that now exists, and the sectional
bickering would have gone on as before. And can any
honourable gentleman really believe that it would have
been possible for a body of men sitting at Ottawa to
administer efficiently and wisely the parish business of
Red River and Newfoundland and all the country between?
Only think of bringing suitors and witnesses such
distances to promote a bill for closing a side-line or
incorporating a club ! And if such a thing were
desirable, would it be possible for any body of men to
go through such a mass of work? Why, the Imperial
parliament, with 650 members, sits for eight months in
the year, and even our parliament sits three or four
months ; how then would it be possible for the
legislature of all the provinces, with a thousand or
twelve hundred bills before it, to accomplish it all ?
The whole year would not suffice for it—and who in these
colonies is able to sacrifice his whole time to the
duties of public life ? But there is another reason why
the union was not made legislative—it could not be
carried. We had either to take the federal union or drop
the negotiation. Not only were our friends from Lower
Canada against it, but so were most of the delegates
from the Maritime Provinces. There was but one choice
open to us—federal union or nothing. But, in truth, the
scheme now before us has all the advantages of a
legislative union and a federal one as well. We have
thrown over on the localities all the questions which
experience has shown lead directly to local jealousy and
discord, and we have retained in the hands of the
general government all the powers necessary to secure a
strong and efficient administration of public affairs.
By placing the appointment of the judges in the hands of
the general government, and the establishment of a
central court of appeal, we have secured uniformity of
justice over the whole land. By vesting the appointment
of the lieutenant-governors in the general government,
and giving a veto for all local measures, we have
secured that no injustice shall be done without appeal
in local legislation. For all dealings with the Imperial
government and foreign countries, we have clothed the
general government with the most ample powers. And
finally, all matters of trade and commerce, banking and
currency, and all questions common to the whole people,
we have vested fully and unrestrictedly in the general
government. The measure, in fact, shuns the faults of
the federal and legislative systems and adopts the best
parts of both, and I am well persuaded it will work
efficiently and satisfactorily.
I am told
that the cost of working this federation scheme will be
enormous. Now, it would be a very rash thing for me, or
any other person, to assert that the expense will not be
great ; for we all know that any system of government
may be made either economical or extravagant precisely
according to the discretion of those who administer it.
But this I am confident of, that with ordinary
discretion, far from being more costly than the existing
system, a very considerable reduction may be readily
effected ; and one thing is quite certain, that no
ingenuity could make it a more costly or extravagant
system than the one we have now. Undoubtedly the mode in
which the local governments shall be constructed will
very much affect the cost of the whole scheme ; but if
we adopt (as I earnestly hope we will) simple and
inexpensive machinery for local purposes, I am quite
satisfied that there will be a reduction to the people
of Canada on the amount they now contribute. I have
great confidence in the economical effect of placing
local expenditures on local shoulders, and in the
salutary influence, in the same direction, of the
representatives of the Maritime Provinces when they come
among us.
HON. Mr.
HOLTON : The trouble is that they will spend our
money—not theirs.
HON. MR.
BROWN : The honourable gentleman is entirely wrong, and
I am amazed at his making such a statement. There is no
portion of the community that will pay more money, per
head, to the revenue, than the people of the Maritime
Provinces. If the honourable gentleman had turned up the
commercial returns of those lower provinces and
calculated the effect of our tariff, if applied to
them—or even a tariff less than ours, for our tariff
must be reduced—he would have known that they will bear
their full proportion of the national burdens.
I am told
that the arrangement as to the debt is unfair—that we
have thrown on the federal exchequer the whole of the
debts of the Maritime Provinces, but only a portion of
the debt of Canada. There is not a particle of force in
this objection. The whole debt of Canada is $67,500,000,
but five millions of this is due to our own people, to
meet which there are certain local funds. Now, if we had
thrown the whole $67,500,000 on the federal treasury, we
must also have handed over to it the local revenues,
which, so far as these five millions are concerned,
would have been precisely the same thing. But, as
regards the public debt with which the federal
government would start, it would not have been the same
thing. By restricting the debt of Canada to $62,500,000,
we restricted the debt of the Maritime Provinces to the
same proportion, or $25 per head of their population ;
but had we thrown our whole debt of sixty-seven and a
half millions on the confederation, the proportion of
debt for the several Maritime Provinces must have been
increased, and the whole debt very greatly augmented.
But in throwing these five millions on the local
governments of Upper and Lower Canada, do we impose a
burden on them they are unable to bear? Quite the
contrary; for with the debt, we give them the
corresponding sources of revenue from which to meet it.
The local governments of Upper and Lower Canada will
severally not only have funds, from the subsidy and
other sources, to meet all expenditure, but a large
surplus besides. I am told that this federation scheme
may be all very right—it may be just, and the very thing
the country needs—but this government had no authority
from parliament to negotiate it. The honourable member
for Cornwall (Hon. John S. Macdonald) particularly
pressed this objection, and I am sorry he is not in his
seat.
HON. MR.
HOLTON : It is quite true.
HON. MR.
CARTIER : No, the reverse is true.
HON. MR.
BROWN : I am astonished to hear such a statement
repeated. No one knows better than the honourable
member for Chateauguay and the honourable member for
Cornwall that in the ministerial explanations brought
down to this House at the time of the formation of this
government, it was distinctly declared that the
government was formed for the special purpose of
maturing a scheme of federal union, and that it would
take means, during the recess, for opening negotiations
with the Maritime Provinces, to bring about such a
union.
Hon. MR.
HOLTON: But not to conclude them.
Hon. MR.
BROWN : What we have done is entirely subject to the
approval of parliament. The honourable member for
Cornwall is the very last man who should have raised
such an objection, for he attended a caucus of the
liberal members of the assembly, heard the whole plans
of the government explained, precisely as they have been
carried out, and he wasthe very person who moved that I
should go into the government to give them effect.
MR. DUNKIN :
And I heard something more said—that nothing should be
done which did not leave the House perfectly free.
HON. MR.
BROWN : I can assure my honourable friend that, as far
as that goes, he never was more free in his life than
now. We do not pretend to say that anything we have done
binds this House ; any member may object if he pleases :
but I do say we received the approval of the House for
opening negotiations, and it is a miserable pretence to
say any-thing to the contrary. We did no more than has
been done by every government, under the British system,
that ever existed. We have but made a compact, subject
to the approval of parliament. So far as this government
is concerned, we are firmly committed to the scheme ;
but so far as the members of the legislature are
concerned, they are as free as air; but I am confident
that this House will almost unanimously accept it—and
not with changes and amendments, but as a whole—as the
very best compromise arrangement that can be obtained.
HON. MR.
HOLTON : We have not the treaty-making power.
HON. MR.
BROWN: I remember a govermment formed from that side of
the House, and the honourable member for Hochelaga (Hon.
Mr. Dorion) will remember it too, which made a treaty
respecting the building of the Intercolonial Railroad.
The honourable member for Cornwall was premier of that
government, and it does not lie in his mouth now to
object to what he himself did. But the honourable
gentleman is entirely wrong when he says we had no power
to make this compact with the Maritime Provinces. We had
full power, express instructions to enter into it.
Hon. Mr.
HOLTON : Did the Parliament of England give you that
power ?
HON. MR.
BROWN: No; the honourable gentleman ought to know that
the treaty-making power is in the Crown—the Crown
authorized us specially to make this compact, and it
has heartily approved of what we did.
I am told
that the people of Canada have not considered this
scheme, and that we ought not to pass it without
appealing to the electors for their approval. Now a
statement more incorrect than this, or more injurious to
the people of Canada, could not be made. They not only
have considered this scheme—for fifteen years they have
been earnestly considering it—but they perfectly
comprehend it. If ever question was thoroughly debated
in any country, the whole subject of constitutional
change has been in Canada. There is not a light in which
it could be placed that has not been thoroughly
canvassed ; and if the House will permit me, I will show
from our historical record how totally absurd this
objection is. The question of a federal union was
agitated thirty years ago, and here is the resolution
adopted by both Houses of the Imperial parliament so far
back as 1837:
“That great
inconvenience has been sustained by His Majesty's
subjects inhabiting the provinces of Lower Canada and
Upper Canada, from the want of some adequate means for
regulating and adjusting questions respecting the trade
and commerce of the said provinces, and divers other
questions wherein the said provinces have a common
interest ; and it is expedient that the legislatures of
the said provinces respectively be authorized to make
provision for the joint regulation and adjustment of
such their common interests.”
In
the instructions given to Lord Durham by the
Imperial government in 1838, this passage occurs :
“It is clear
that some plan must be devised to meet the just demands
of Upper Canada. It will be for your Lordship, in
conjunction with the committee, to consider if- this
should not be done by constituting some joint
legislative authority, which should preside over all
questions of common interest to the two provinces, and
which might be appealed to in extraordinary cases, to
arbitrate between contending parties in either ;
preserving, however, to each province its distinct
legislature, with authority in all matters of an
exclusively domestic concern. If this should be your
opinion, you will have further time to consider what
should be the nature and limits of such authority, and
all the particulars which ought to be comprehended in
any scheme for its establishment.”
In Lord
Durham's admirable report of 1839, I find this passage :
“The bill
should contain provisions by which any or all of the
other North American colonies may, on the application of
the legislature, be, with the consent of the two Canadas
or their united legislature, admitted into the union on
such terms as may be agreed on between them. As the mere
amalgamation of the Houses of Assembly of the two
provinces would not be advisable, or give at all a due
representation to each, a parliamentary commission
should be appointed for the purpose of forming the
electoral divisions and determining the number of
members to he returned on the principle of giving
representation as near as may be in proportion to
population. The same commission should form a plan of
local government by elective bodies, subordinate to the
general legislature, and exercising a complete control
over such local affairs as do not come within the
province of general legislation. The plan so framed
should be made an Act of the Imperial parliament, so as
to prevent the general legislature from encroaching on
the powers of the local bodies. A general executive on
an improved principle should be established, together
with the supreme court of appeal for all the North
American colonies.”
And here is
the statement of Lord John Russell, in 1839, while
introducing the original bill founded on Lord Durham's
report:
“The bill
provides for the establishment of a central district at
Montreal and its neighbourhood, at which the government
shall be carried on, and where the assembly shall meet.
The other parts of Upper and of Lower Canada are each to
be divided into two districts. It is proposed that these
districts should be formed for the purpose of becoming
municipal districts, for the imposition of taxes and
rates for all local purposes.”
My next
quotation shall be from the proceedings of a body of
gentlemen who made a great commotion in their day and
generation—the British American League. I hold hi my
hand the proceedings of the league of 3rd November,
1849, and among other names mentioned I find those of
the Hon. George Moffatt, Thomas Wilson, the Hon. Geo.
Crawford, the Hon. Asa A. Burnham, John W. Gamble, Mr.
Aikman, of Barton, Ogle R. Gowan, John Duggan, the Hon.
Col. Fraser, George Benjamin, the Hon. P. M.
Vankoughnet, and last, though not least, the Hon. John
A. Macdonald—of whom, however, I find it recorded that
he spoke in a very jocose manner. Here is the resolution
of the league :
“That
whether protection or reciprocity shall be conceded or
with-held, it is essential to the welfare of this
colony, and its future good government, that a
constitution should be framed in unison with the wishes
of the people, and suited to the growing importance and
intelligence of the country, and that such constitution
should embrace a union of the British North American
Provinces on mutually advantageous and fairly arranged
terms, with the concession from the mother country of
enlarged powers of self-government.”
I pass on to
1856, when we had the motion and speech of my honourable
friend the Minister of Finance (Hon. Mr. Galt) in favour
of a union of all the British American Provinces, but,
as the whole House is familiar with it, I shall not read
the document. But in the Votes and Proceedings of this
House, of 25th April, 1856, I find a very remarkable
document. It is a notice of motion to be made in this
House, and its contents are as follows :
“Resolved,—1. That the inconveniences arising from the
Legislative Union between Upper and Lower Canada, render
desirable the dissolution of that Union.
“ 2. That a
committee be appointed to inquire into the means which
should be adopted to form a new political and
legislative organization of the heretofore provinces of
Upper and Lower Canada, either by the establishment of
their former territorial divisions, or by a division of
each province so as to form a confederation having a
federal government and a local legislature for each one
of the new provinces, and to deliberate as to the course
which should be adopted to regulate the affairs of
united Canada in a manner which would be equitable to
the different sections of the province."
HON. Mr.
CARTIER: Whose notice was that?
HON. MR.
BROWN: This notice of motion was given by my honourable
friend the member for Hochelaga (Hon. Mr. Dorion).
HON. MR.
DORION : It was in amendment of that of the honourable
member for Sherbrooke, which I did not exactly like.
HON. MR.
HOLTON: And which that honourable gentleman did not
venture to move, so that the House did not pronounce
upon it.
HON. MR.
BROWN: But my honourable friend (Hon. Mr. Dorion) made a
speech which I perfectly remember. He held this motion
in his hand while he spoke.
HON. MR.
DORION : I made a speech on the motion of the honourable
member for Haldimand, Mr. Mackenzie, not on my own.
HON. MR.
BROWN : That does not signify. I seek not to fasten down
my honourable friend to the views he then held. Much
light has been thrown on the whole subject since 1856,
and I trust we will all act on our conscientious
convictions of what is best for the country now, without
regard to any opinions we may at other times have held.
But when my honourable friend and others allege that
there never has been in Canada an agitation in favour of
a federal system, and that the people have never
considered such a proposition, I think it directly in
point to prove the contrary by my honourable friend's
own proceedings. The next step in the constitutional
agitation of the country was the formation of the
Brown-Dorion administration. That was in 1858 ; and to
show how serious my honourable friend opposite (Hon. Mr.
Dorion) and myself and our ten colleagues viewed the
position of the country from the denial of
constitutional reform, I will read the official
statement of the basis on which the government was
formed. I read from the Journals of the Legislative
Council for 1858 :
“For some
years past, sectional feelings have risen in this
country, which, especially during the present session,
have seriously impeded the carrying on of the
administrative and legislative functions of the
government. The late administration made no attempt to
meet these difficulties or to suggest a remedy for
them, and thereby the evil has been greatly aggravated.
His Excellency's present advisers have entered the
government with the fixed determination to propose
constitutional measures for the establishment of that
harmony between Upper and Lower Canada which is
essential to the prosperity of the province. They
respectfully submit that they have a right to claim all
the support which His Excellency can constitutionally
extend to them in the prosecution of this all-important
object."
Here was a
government formed seven years ago for the express
purpose of doing that which we are now engaged in—a
government distinctly telling the Governor-General that
the peace and prosperity of the country were endangered
because constitutional remedies were deferred ; and yet
my honourable friends opposite, who with me were
responsible for that document, tell us that we are not
now in a fit position to legislate upon this question.
But I come next to the famous despatch to the Colonial
Minister, signed in 1858 by my honourable friend the
Minister of Finance, the Attorney-General (east), and
the Hon. John Ross. It stated that " very grave
difficulties now present themselves in conducting the
government of Canada;" that "the progress of population
has been more rapid in the western section, and claims
are now made on behalf of its inhabitants for giving
them representation in the legislature in proportion to
their numbers ; " that " the result is shown by an
agitation fraught with great danger to the peaceful and
harmonious working of our constitutional system, and,
consequently, detrimental to the progress of the
province ; “that " this state of things is yearly
becoming worse ;” and that “the Canadian government
were impressed with the necessity of seeking for such a
mode of dealing with those difficulties as may for ever
remove them.” What must have been the state of public
feeling when the conservative government of 1858
ventured to use such language as this ?—and how can any
one pretend that the people do not comprehend this
question, when seven years of agitation have passed
since that document was penned ?
I come now
to a still more important document—one that goes into
the details and the merits of just such a scheme as that
before the House, I refer to the manifesto issued, in
1859, by the Lower Canada members of the liberal party
in this House. It is very long, and I will only read
from it a few extracts :
“Your
committee are impressed with the conviction that whether
we consider the present needs or the probable future
condition of the country, the true, the statesmanlike
solution is to be sought in the substitution of a purely
federative for the present so-called legislative union ;
the former, it is believed, would enable us to escape
all the evils, and to retain all the advantages,
appertaining to the existing union….
“The
proposition to federalize the Canadian union is not new.
On the contrary, it has been frequently mooted in
parliament and in the press during the last few years.
It was, no doubt, suggested by the example of the
neighbouring states, where the admirable adaptation of
the federal system to the government of an extensive
territory, inhabited by people of divers origins,
creeds, laws and customs, has been amply demonstrated;
but shape and consistency were first imparted to it in
1856, when it was formally submitted to parliament by
the Lower Canada opposition, as offering, in their
judgment, the true corrective of the abuses generated
under the present system…..
“By this
division of power the general government would be
relieved from those questions of a purely local and
sectional character, which, under our present system,
have led to much strife and ill-will….
“The
committee believe that it is clearly demonstrable that
the direct cost of maintaining both the federal and
local governments need not exceed that of our present
system, while its enormous indirect cost would, in
con-sequence of the additional checks on expenditure
involved in the new system, and the more direct
responsibility of public servants in the province to
the people immediately affected by such expenditure, be
entirely obviated….
“The
proposed system could in no way diminish the importance
of the colony, or impair its credit, while it presents
the advantage of being susceptible, without any
disturbance of the federal economy, of such territorial
extension as circumstances may hereafter render
desirable."
Now, who
were the signers of the address ?—on whose special
responsibility was this manifesto sent forth to the
world? Why, it was signed by my honourable friend
opposite, Hon. A. A. Dorion, Hon. T. D. McGee, Hon. L.
T. Drummond, and Hon. L. A. Dessaulles, four of the most
able and most popular leaders of the Lower Canada
liberal party—the party now virulently opposing the
resolutions before the chair. So my honourable friend
opposite (Hon. Mr. Dorion) not only agitated
the country for constitutional changes, but insisted
that it should take the shape of a federal union,
because of the cheapness of that system and the facility
it afforded for bringing within the federation the other
British American Provinces; and yet, six years after the
promulgation of this document, my honourable friend gets
up and repudiates a federal union because of its
frightful cost, and because it does bring within the
federation the other British American Provinces !
MR. POWELL :
Who wrote that document ?
HON. MR.
BROWN : I cannot exactly say who did the composition ;
but will not my honourable friend from Chateauguay (Hon.
Mr. Holton) permit me to ask if his hand is not
discoverable in it? If so, he well may be proud of it,
for it is a masterly exposition.
HON. MR.
HOLTON : Will my honourable friend accept it as an
amendment to his scheme?
HON. MR.
GALT : No ; ours is better than that !
HON. MR.
BROWN : I come now to the great meeting of the reformers
of Upper Canada, known as the Toronto convention of
1859, and at which 570 delegates were present from all
parts of the western province. Here are the two chief
resolutions :
“ 5.
Resolved,—That in the opinion of this assembly, the
best practicable remedy for the evils now encountered
in the government of Canada is to be found in the
formation of two or more local governments, to which
shall be committed the control of all matters of a local
or sectional character, and some joint authority
charged with such matters as are necessarily common to
both sections of the province.
“ 6.
Resolved,—That while the details of the changes
proposed in the last resolution are necessarily subject
for future arrangement, yet this assembly deems it
imperative to declare that no government would be
satisfactory to the people of Upper Canada which is not
based on the principle of representation by
population.”
Here we have
the very essence of the measure now before us for
adoption—deliberately approved of by the largest body
of representative men ever assembled in Upper Canada for
a political purpose ; and yet we are to be told that our
people do not understand the question, and we must go to
them and explain it, letter by letter, at an immense
cost to the country, and at the risk of losing the whole
scheme? But let us see what followed. A. general
election was ordered in 1861—there was a fierce contest
at the polls—and the main question at every hustings was
the demand for constitutional changes. The result of
that contest was the overthrow of the Cartier-Macdonald
ministry and the formation of the Macdonald-Sicotte
administration in its room. But so bitter bad been the
struggle for and against constitutional changes, and so
clearly defined were party lines upon it, that it was
found impossible to construct that government without a
distinct pledge that it would resist every motion made
upon the subject
HON. MR.
BOLTON : Did you recognize the propriety of that course
?
HON. MR.
BROWN : No, indeed, I did not. I but cite the fact to
show how thoroughly the whole question has been
agitated, and how perfectly its bearings have, for years
past, been understood. Well, mark what followed. One
short year had not passed over the heads of the
Macdonald-Sicotte ministry before they tottered to their
fall; and so repugnant to the House and to the country
was their conduct on the constitutional question, that
they dared not appeal to the country until they had
changed their avowed policy upon it, and replaced the
men who had forced upon them the narrow policy of the
year before, by gentlemen understood to be more in
favour of constitutional changes. The government
(Macdonald-Dorion), so reconstructed, went to the
country in 1863, but in the year following, it too fell
in its turn, simply because it did not deal boldly with
the constitutional question
HON. MR.
DORION : We had the support of all who were in favour of
the question.
HON. MR.
BROWN : Indeed, you had not.
HON. MR.
HOLTON : We should have fallen if we had attempted to
deal
with it.
HON. MR.
BROWN : I entirely deny that ; had you pursued a bold
policy upon it you might have been in office up to this
hour. Well, the Macdonald-Dorion made away for the
Taché-Macdonald administration, but it too soon fell by
a majority of two, simply because it did not deal with
the constitutional question
A VOICE :
Oh, oh !
HON. MR.
BROWN : My honourable friend cries “Oh, oh," and I am
perfectly amazed at his doing so. I am about to offer my
honourable friend the most complete proof of the
correctness of my statement—proof so conclusive that if
he does not accept of it as such, I do not know how he
can be convinced of anything. In one single day the
Taché-Macdonald administration, by taking up the
constitutional question boldly, turned their minority of
two into a majority of seventy. Could anything prove
more unanswerably than this the deep hold this question
has on the public mind, and the assured confidence of
the members of this House that their constituents
understand its whole merits, when, in one day, such a
start-ling political revolution was brought about ? Was
it, think you, a doubtful consideration that could have
induced the Upper Canada opposition, almost as one man,
to cast down their party intrenchments and make common
cause with their opponents ? Could there have been the
slightest doubt as to the sentiments of our people and
the imperative necessity of immediate action, when such
men as now sit on the treasury benches were forced, by
their supporters, to unite for the settlement of this
question ? And could there be a more conclusive proof of
the ripeness of public opinion than the unanimous and
cordial manner in which our so uniting has been
sustained by the press of all parties, and by the
electors at the polls? Never, I venture to assert, was
any great measure so thoroughly understood, and so
cordially endorsed by the people of Canada, as this
measure now under consideration. The British government
approves of it, the legislative council approves of it,
this House almost unanimously approves of it, the press
of all parties approves of it ; and though the scheme
has already been directly submitted to fifty out of the
one hundred constituencies into which Canada is
divided, only four candidates ventured to appear at the
hustings in opposition to it—all of them in Lower
Canada—and but two of them were elected.
And yet we
are to be told that we are stealing a march upon the
country ; that it is not understood by the people ; and
that we must dissolve the House upon it, at a vast cost
to the exchequer, and at the risk of allowing political
partisanship to dash the fruit from our hands at the
very moment we are about to grasp it ! I have no fears
whatever of an appeal to the people. I cannot pretend to
speak as to the popular feeling in Lower Canada, but I
think I thoroughly understand the popular mind of the
western province, and I hesitate not to say that there
are not five gentlemen in this chamber (if so many) who
could go before their constituents in Upper Canada in
opposition to this scheme, with the slightest chance of
being returned. It is because I thoroughly comprehend
the feelings of the people upon it, that I urge the
adoption of this measure at the earliest possible
moment. The most gross injustice is to be rectified by
it; the tax-payer is to be clothed with his rightful
influence by it; new commercial relations are to be
opened up by it ; a new impulse to the industrial
pursuits of the country will be given by it ; and I for
one would feel myself false to the cause I have so long
sustained, and false to the best interests of my
constituents, if I permitted one hour unnecessarily to
pass without bringing it to a final issue. It was only
by the concurrence of most propitious circumstances that
the wonderful progress this movement has made could have
been accomplished. Most peculiar were the circumstances
that enabled such a coalition to be formed as that now
existing for the settlement of this question ; and who
shall say at what hour it may not be rent asunder ? And
yet, who will venture to affirm that if party spirit in
all its fierceness were once more to be let loose
amongst us, there would be the slightest hope that this
great question could be approached with that candour and
harmony necessary to its satisfactory solution ?
Then, at the
very moment we resolved to deal with this question of
constitutional change, the Maritime Provinces were about
to assemble joint conference to consider whether they
ought not to form a union among themselves ; and the way
was thus most propitiously opened up for the
consideration of a union of all British America. The
civil war too in the neighbouring republic ; the
possibility of war between Great Britain and the United
States ; the threatened repeal of the reciprocity treaty
; the threatened abolition of the American bonding
system for goods in transitu to and from these
provinces ; the unsettled position of the -Hudson's Bay
Company; and the changed feeling of England as to the
relations of great colonies to the parent state ; all
combine at this moment to arrest earnest, attention to
the gravity of the situation, and unite us all in one
vigorous effort to meet the emergency like men.
The
interests to be affected by this scheme of union are
very large and varied ; but the pressure of
circumstances upon all the colonies is so serious at
this moment, that if we cannot now banish partisanship
and sectionalism and petty objections, and look at the
matter on its broad intrinsic merits, what hope is there
of our ever being able to do so? An appeal to the people
of Canada on this measure simply means postponement of
the question for a year ; and who can tell how changed
ere then may be the circumstances surrounding us ? The
man who strives for the postponement of this measure on
any ground, is doing what he can to kill it almost as
effectually as if he voted against it. Let there be no
mistake as to the manner in which the government
presents this measure to the House- We do not present it
as free from fault, but we do present it as a measure so
advantageous to the people of Canada, that all the
blemishes, real or imaginary, averred against it, sink
into utter insignificance in presence of its merits. We
present it, not in the precise shape we in Canada would
desire it, but as in the best shape the five colonies to
be united could agree upon it. We present it in the form
in which the five governments have severally adopted
it—in the form the Imperial government has endorsed
it—and in the form in which we believe all the
legislatures of the provinces will accept it. We ask the
House to pass it in the exact form in which we have
presented it, for we know not how alterations may affect
its safety in other places; and the process of
alteration once commenced in four different
legislatures, who could tell where that would end? Every
member of this House is free as air to criticise it if
he so wills, and amend it if he is able ; but we warn
him of the danger of amendment, and throw on him all
responsibility of the consequences. We feel confident of
carrying this scheme as it stands, but we cannot tell
what we can do if it be amended. Let not honourable
gentlemen approach this measure as a sharp critic deals
with an abstract question, striving to point out
blemishes and display his ingenuity ; but let us
approach it as men having but one consideration before
us—the establishment of the future peace and prosperity
of our country. Let us look at it in the light of a few
months back —in the light of the evils and injustice to
which it applies a remedy—in the light of the years of
discord and strife we have spent in seeking for that
remedy—in the light with which the people of Canada
would regard this measure were it to be lost, and all
the evils of past years to be brought back upon us
again. Let honourable gentlemen look at the question in
this view, and what one of them will take the
responsibility of casting his vote against the measure ?
The future destiny of these great provinces may be
affected by the decision we are about to give to an
extent which at this moment we may be unable to
estimate, but assuredly the welfare for many years of
four millions of people hangs on our decision. Shall we
then rise equal to the occasion?—shall we approach this
discussion without partisanship, and free from every
personal feeling but the earnest resolution to discharge
conscientiously the duty which an overruling Providence
has placed upon us ? It may be that some among us will
live to see the day when, as the result of this measure,
a great and powerful people may have grown up on these
lands—when the boundless forests all around us shall
have given way to smiling fields and thriving towns—and
when one united government, under the British flag,
shall extend from shore to shore ; but who would desire
to see that day, if he could not recall with
satisfaction the part he took in this discussion ?
I have done.
I leave the subject to the conscientious judgment of the
House, in the confident expectation and belief that the
decision it will render will be worthy of the parliament
of Canada.
Source:
George BROWN, "Speech
on Confederation (72 Resolutions)", in
Alexander MACKENZIE, The Life and
Speeches of Hon. George Brown, Toronto,
The Globe Printing Company, 1882, 381p., pp.
299-347. |