Professor Klar has kindly extended me an invitation to write about the exclusion of British MP George Galloway from Canada, so denying him the opportunity to fulfill speaking engagements in Toronto. He did so on the basis that he did not have the background to allow him to comment on the case, and complimented me by saying that I probably did. This is because I teach Immigration Law at his law faculty.
On this basis, I feel obliged to make a few remarks about what I understand to be the legal context of the Galloway decision. However, in the end, I don’t think one’s views on this case should turn on legal niceties. Any of us who care about freedom of expression, as Professor Klar clearly does, have reason to be concerned about the federal government’s decision to keep Mr. Galloway out of Canada. We should be especially concerned that this has been done so casually, by invoking the authority of law and such grand concepts as national sovereignty and security.
Mr. Galloway is, of course, a highly controversial figure. He is a long-time and trenchant critic of Israeli government policies, and a supporter of Palestinian causes. He maintained connections with Saddam Hussein long after most of the rest of the world had declared him a pariah, and bitterly attacked the Blair government for joining in the invasion of Iraq. It is commonplace at this point to agree that he is a most offensive and distasteful person, and in supporting his ability to enter into and speak in Canada, one in no way endorses his views. Well I don’t agree with everything or even most of what I’ve heard Mr. Galloway say in the many public arenas in which we have come to know him—in many TV and radio interviews, in his lengthy testimony before the U.S. Senate—but I also have not heard him say anything on those occasions that is or should be outside the bounds of public discourse in this or any democratic society. Moreover, Mr. Galloway makes his points with verve and, often, humor. In other words, I don’t turn off the TV or radio when he comes on. And I don’t want my government turning him off on my behalf.
OK, now back to the law. The government has ruled Mr. Galloway inadmissible to Canada under s. 34(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act on the basis that there are “reasonable grounds to believe… a foreign national is inadmissible on security grounds for …engaging in terrorism, being a danger to the security of Canada or… being a member of an organization that there are reasonable grounds to believe engages in [these activities.]” Section 34(1) goes on to say that the above grounds do not constitute inadmissibility if the person satisfies the Minister of Immigration that their presence in Canada “would not be detrimental to the national interest.”
The strongest case that seems to be available with respect to George Galloway is that he may have or be intending to fundraise for Hamas, an organization that is listed by the Canadian government as a terrorist group. He denies even being a supporter of Hamas. True, Galloway led a caravan of aid supplies to Gaza in the weeks following the recent military action there, but it would seem a long stretch to say this is proscribed activity. Public Safety Canada’s own website on “listed entities” [http://www.publicsafety.gc.ca/prg/ns/le/index-eng.aspx] says the following:
“It is an offence to knowingly participate in or contribute to, directly or indirectly, any activity of a terrorist group. This participation is only an offence if its purpose is to enhance the ability of any terrorist group to facilitate or carry out a terrorist activity.”
Well, if you take this and that scrap of information, and stretch the meaning of several words in the statute, and make every negative imputation about Galloway’s character and motives, maybe you can get to a technical basis for the government’s ruling. Does anyone sincerely believe these terms do or should apply to Mr. Galloway? I think you can only do so on the basis of saying “the government must know something that I don’t, and I’m happy to trust them on this.” For many reasons, I don’t think that is wise.
I’ve heard and read that this case is more about Canadian sovereignty and our ability to control who does and does not get to enter this country, than anything like freedom of expression. It’s true that immigration remains one area in our law in which ministerial discretion plays a great part. However, arbitrary exercises of state authority have become less and less acceptable in immigration, just as in most other areas of public law. Sovereignty does not and should not mean ‘the government gets to keep out anyone it does not like.’ The grounds set out in the statute have meaning, and if the Galloway goes to Court on judicial review, I expect that point will win out.
Another thing that has been said in defence of the government’s action is that no foreign national, including Mr. Galloway, has a “right” to enter Canada, let alone to speak here. In a constitutional sense, that’s true. However, to speak of rights in this way is not helpful. If any of us wished to have a relative visit us from the U.K. or another country, we would correctly feel that we and they had a “right” to the visit, unless there were very specific reasons and evidence for the state to block it.
Besides, the rights I’m most concerned with here are not Mr. Galloway’s. The main point is the right of Canadians to hear from those people they want to hear from. That’s whose freedom of expression is truly at stake. One of the peculiarities of the Cold War years was that in the name freedom, the U.S. barred many academics, authors and public figures from entering and speaking in the U.S. due to their left-wing views and associations. The U.S. still bars its own citizens from travelling to Cuba. It always seemed an advantage of the Canadian approach (something I know is close to Prof. Klar’s heart) that we avoided hiving ourselves off from opposing and disturbing views. Mr. Galloway is currently touring the U.S. quite peacefully. At the same time that much of the world is expressing sorrow that South Africa may well have betrayed its proud human rights heritage by denying entry to the Dalai Lama because of the controversy surrounding him, it is particularly painful to see Canada doing much the same thing.
Peter Carver is a law professor at the University of Alberta and teaches immigration,administrative and constitutional law.
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I agree with the gist of Peter Carver's comments but, as a semantic quibbler, I suggest that he uses the term 'rights' too loosely.
ReplyDeleteA relative from a foreign country has no right to visit Canada -- although we may receive a justifiable benefit from such a visit.
Canadians have no right to hear from George Galloway -- although we may receive justifiable benefits from hearing from him, and from an immigration policy that allows his visit.
Of course he should be allowed to visit and to speak.
Ron C
Professor Carver,
ReplyDeleteA solid post. I am intrigued by the reasoning that this has to do with Canadian sovereignty. And by intrigued, I mean it is either disingenuous or potentially quite dangerous. We are a nation of laws, not men. But if you could post any links to articles making that argument, I'd be interested.
Richard Witherwood
Professor Carver,
ReplyDeleteIt's not clear from the news reports if the initial decision to deny Galloway's entrance was made at the high civil service level or by the Minister. Do you think it's possible that (e.g.) the permanent deputy minister made a political call, and now the government is backing it? Or would an applicant like Galloway go immediately to a cabinent level discussion?
It's hard for me to see what the Conservative government's angle on this is. The man didn't have any grist with the Canadians until this incident, so it's hard to see what optical/political harm his speaking would've done to the government. And I don't think I'm alone in thinking that the government isn't doing this out of principle.
The UK government **hates** Galloway. Maybe someone called in a favour?
Anyway, interesting post, I'm in total agreement, &c &c. The language of s. 34 (1) seems pretty ridiculous. If Galloway's charitable contributions (regardless of their PR motive) disqualify him, the Red Cross, the UN, and Oxfam are equally "inadmissible."
-scott
Well reasoned Peter Carver. And kudos to the pundit for sharing his forum with you! Much as I hate everything about Mr. Galloway, and will not miss his visit, the basic principle of excluding him does create intellectual discomfort for this writer. And the banning of this man only raises his public profile in Canada. George who?
ReplyDeleteI agree that banning Galloway is misguided. But to say that his visit would not in and of itself have given him the profile that his exclusions has achieved is just not familiar with his oratorical powers. Remember his appearance at the US Senate?
ReplyDeleteThanks to Peter Carver for airing the terrain so usefully and soberly and I second the kudus to the Pundit for opening up this forum to well reasoned arguments.
ReplyDeleteA commentator states we are a nation of laws not men with such ease so I say with equal ease that even purporting that to be the ideal is a dangerous and clearly disingenuous simplification. Laws are applied by men and women selectively and we have just emerged under Bush II from 8 years of fervent ideological discriminatory legal disciple. Here at home similar discipline applies when it comes to Israel and the PCs.
Yes, by denying him access they make him better known - but not in a good way, via accusations, not directly through hearing powerful argument and oratory. Another example (like other recent funding cut proposals) of a ham handed, imperious party who - like with the tempest over Mulroney's credentials - again show themselves as small minded.
Small minded but with a big fixation on sanitizing discourse over Israel. (I might take a cheap shot and say who needs any Israel lobby in Canada with these politicians at the helm but that is actually wholly inaccurate: the protected lobby activities of titans like Shwartz and Reisman et al and their Liberal and PC friends have been wildly successful in tilting Canada's UN voting record much closer to Israel in just a few years).
Perhaps this world attention grabbing act is an involuntary reflex by controlling types: what good is this anti-terror legislation if we don't use it once in a while to whack someone - so lets whack Hamas again. The Canadian Arab Federation lost (for them) very substantial program funding over alleged 'support' just after the president of CAF called Kenney a "professional whore" in his bias toward one people and one side, Israel. Hamas is the bogeyman waved by those who will not give up illegally settled land for peace.
Galloway cuts through in argument, tone and is an attractive man - he offers radically different thinking to the population by his example and someone found that dangerous.
I will be watching the CAF lawsuit closely -
http://www.nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=1431235 - the article also boasts a very attractive picture of Kenney for a free speech booster's dart board.
I am in full agreement with the Canadian government on this. Canada, like any other country, has the right to bar entry or restrict the movements of individuals to ensure sovereignty and security. From the Fenian raids of the 1860s which arguably spurred Confederation, Canadian history is replete with such examples. In 1923, MacKenzie-King refused the Cleveland Steamer entry into Canadian waters as it was transporting radical union organizers from Detroit and Toledo. In 1996, Hong Kong-based martial arts actor Steven Chow was barred from entering Canada due to alleged triad gang links. More recently, in 2007, American citizen and Black Panther leader, the controversial Malik Zulu Shabazz was denied entry into Canada at Pearson Airport in Toronto on a technicality (he had a 5 year old misdemeanour conviction) http://bit.ly/WrMz . We may disagree on a case-by-case basis, but the importance of the overarching principle of protecting Canada's sovereignty cannot be overstated.
ReplyDeleteGeoffrey Daniels