The Globe and Mail - 19.10.2019

(Ron) #1

O8 O THEGLOBEANDMAIL| SATURDAY,OCTOBER19,2019


O


ne afternoon in June, ear-
lier this year, the mayor of
the country’s largest city,
the Premier of its most populous
province and the Prime Minister
of Canada found themselves un-
expectedly sharing a stage to-
gether in downtown Toronto.
They – along with an estimated
two million fans from through-
out the city – had come together
to pay tribute to a group of
young (and mostly black) men.
Four days prior, the Toronto
Raptors had defeated the Golden
State Warriors for the NBA cham-
pionship, leading to a national
outpouring of pride and joy. The
Raptors possessed an incandes-
cent quality, and a rare one:
They were Canadianandcool,
two words that don’t usually
come together unless you’re
talking about the weather.
For the Prime Minister, the
election loomed, and for the oth-
ers, it was a rare moment in po-
litical life: a captive audience
with a deep well of goodwill. Of
course politicians wanted to be
associated with the Raptors.
It wasn’t just politicians. Nev-
er in my life have I seen so much
of the country so enthralled by
so many black men. Possibly not
since Donovan Bailey captured
the gold medal in the 100-metre
dash at the 1996 Atlanta Summer
Olympic Games had Canadians
felt such intense joy at the suc-
cess of someone (in this case,
many people) from the black
community.
Unwilling to brave the crowds,
I watched from a television in
my office as Justin Trudeau
screamed hoarsely into a micro-
phone that “the diversity this
team represents is that of the en-
tire country.” Mayor John Tory
presented the team with the key
to the city, while the crowd sere-
naded Premier Doug Ford with
boos.
What will happen, I won-
dered, when these men leave the
stage? What will happen when
the crowd disperses from Nathan
Phillips Square, when the gar-
bage is cleaned up, the streets
are turned back over to traffic,
and the glow of the champion-
ship begins to wane like the light
of a setting sun?
The crowd that day looked
more like the athletes who
joined the politicians on stage. I
saw black faces, many young –
not often fêted by our politic-
ians, not deemed as important
as a victory parade – faces that
also would fade conveniently in
and then out of the views of men
like the mayor, the Premier and
the Prime Minister. These power-
ful leaders had all found time
out of their busy schedules to
crash a party thrown for a victo-
ry they played no part in win-
ning. Where, I wondered, were
these politicians – leaders, I’m
told – for the regular and equally
(if not more, frankly) heroic


black people who don’t wear
team jerseys?
Black people are one of the
most targeted groups for hate
crimes in Canada. From 2005 to
2015, there was a 71.1-per-cent in-
crease in the federal black prison
population. Educational inequi-
ties persist between black people
in Canada and their white coun-
terparts. According to the 2017
Report of the Working Group of
Experts on People of African De-
scent on its mission to Canada,
“black Canadian children are liv-
ing in poverty at the unprece-
dented rate of 33 per cent for
children of Caribbean heritage
and 47 per cent for children of
continental African heritage,
compared to 18 per cent of white
Canadian children living below
the poverty line.” The list, unfor-
tunately, goes on. From house-
hold and economic concerns to
criminal-justice issues and im-
migration, black people face a
seemingly immovable force de-
termined to prevent our success,
and our politicians don’t seem
concerned with helping to coun-
ter that force.
I’ve thought about the Rap-
tors’ celebration many times in
the weeks and months that fol-
lowed, and especially during the
past six weeks, which have fea-
tured one of those men, Justin
Trudeau, in a battle to save his
job and to lead the country for
another four years. Again, we
have arrived at election day hav-
ing avoided debating the issues
relevant to black communities –
issues that overlap with and af-
fect many other communities in
this country. The concerns and
desires of those black faces in
the crowd that June day have
been missing, once again, from
the discourse, from the debates,
from the campaigns. Instead, as
usual, it’s up to the community
to make their voices heard.
As a politically engaged black
woman living in Canada, I will
head to my local polling station
on Monday, but it feels like my
ballot has been spoiled before
it’s even been cast.

The history of black Canadians is
a rich tapestry; tugging a single
thread could take you from the
enslaved and indentured men
and women of New France to the
fortunate escapees who took the
Underground Railroad to its ter-
minus in Ontario and Quebec;
from the Black Loyalists in Nova
Scotia to the black cowboys and
homesteaders of the Prairies and
the black communities of British
Columbia. We out here, but we
beenhere.
Yet, for all the history – deep,
diverse and dispersed – black po-
litical life has remained separate
from politics in Canada. Despite
an unbroken presence in the
country, the fortunes and well-
being of black people have risen,
stagnated and, in some ways, re-
versed. And our political leaders
don’t seem to care.
Contrast this with U.S. politics.
The agenda for Democrats is set

and won by courting black vot-
ers. Arguably, black voters are
captive to the Democratic Party,
but they are, at least, a force to
be reckoned with. The Congres-
sional Black Caucus wields 53
seats in the House of Represen-
tatives, approximately 12 per
cent of the total number of seats.
With black Americans making
up 13.4 per cent of the U.S. pop-
ulation, they thus are nearly
equally represented in their leg-
islature.
In Canada, during the 2015
election, 30 black candidates
from the five major parties ran
for office. Seven of those candi-
dates won seats, one of whom,
Celina Caesar-Chavannes, an-
nounced last spring she would
not run for re-election. (Notably,
the “Because it’s 2015” cabinet of
diversity did not include black
members.) That means that, in
the last Parliament, barely 2 per
cent of seats were held by black
members of Parliament. Accord-
ing to the 2016 census, black peo-
ple in Canada represent 3.5 per
cent of the population, number-
ing 1.2 million. Black people in
both Canada and the United
States remain underrepresented.
The black population in Cana-
da is a growing one. Since 1996,
when it was approximately
600,000, the number of black
Canadians has doubled. That in-
crease can be accounted for by
black immigration to Canada –
increasingly from Africa – but al-
so from the number of black
people born in Canada in the
past two decades. In 2016, per
Statistics Canada, 26.6 per cent of
the black population was under
the age of 15 while for the rest of
the population the number of
young people accounted for 16.9
per cent.
Ontario has the highest num-
ber of black people, containing
just more than half the country’s
black population. But from 1996
to 2006, the black population in
Alberta has quintupled, and in
Manitoba and Saskatchewan,
there are three times as many
black people now than in 1996.
Notably, the fastest growing ur-
ban populations of black people
include Lethbridge, Alta., and
Moncton, N.B.
The growing number of black
people across the country, espe-
cially in the Prairies, has political
effects.
For the first time in Manitoba,
black people will be represented

in the provincial legislature – by
not just one, but three MLAs. Ac-
cording to the population pro-
jections from Statistics Canada,
by 2036, black Canadians are
projected to account for between
5 per cent and 6 per cent of the
country. Canada is only going to
get blacker.
But black Canadians cannot
be said to be held in thrall to a
single party. Whereas black peo-
ple in the post-1960s United
States allegiances shifted en
masse to the Democratic Party,
black Canadian political “firsts”
represent an array of parties.
The first woman to vie for the
leadership of a federal party was
British Columbian Rosemary
Brown, a black woman who ran
for the NDP. The first black per-
son elected to the House of Com-
mons was Lincoln Alexander, a
Progressive Conservative from
Ontario. And the first black
woman to win a federal seat was
Jean Augustine, winning in 1993
for the Liberal Party.
The casual assumption that all
black people are left and Liberal
voters is common. But if you
think black voters are solely pro-
gressive liberals then you
haven’t met a lot of my uncles.

Ironically, this federal campaign,
which wraps up this weekend
with a neck-and-neck race be-
tween Justin Trudeau’s Liberals
and Andrew Scheer’s Conserva-
tive Party, is that we’ve been talk-
ing about race more than any
other election during my life-
time.
In September, several photos
emerged of a younger Mr. Tru-
deau wearing blackface. When
I’d finished screaming, then
laughing, I sighed, knowing the
photos would encapsulate the
frustrations of being a black vot-
er. The first people to speak to
the Prime Minister were a plane-
load of (white) reporters. It
would not be until the next day
and until the last question of Mr.
Trudeau’s follow-up news con-
ference that the Prime Minister
was asked to name specific pol-
icies to do with racialized people.
The moment was defined as a
choice between apologizing, re-
signing and counting the num-
ber of blackface instances. Mean-
ing a thoroughly political con-
versation – a politician! Wearing
blackface! In an election! – failed
to answer any political question.
Feelings overran policy, to the
detriment of black and racialized
people.
In the immediate aftermath of
the photos, the Liberal Party an-
nounced their plans for ending
gun violence – a policy that has
been led by former Toronto po-
lice chief Bill Blair, whose
achievements include the expan-
sion of racial profiling. The Con-
servative Party’s riposte included
a plan to classify gang members
on par with terrorists, increase
mandatory minimums and to
end “automatic bail” – a process
that does not exist. Their plans
also include an expansion of

prison sentences by both admin-
istrative and judicial means. The
NDP hopes to bring an end to
carding (racial profiling with a
snappier name) by federal law
enforcement and introduce a
task force to study the “chronic
overrepresentation” of black and
Indigenous people in the federal
prison system.
Of course, black political con-
cerns are not solely matters of
crime. Yet, as Robin Maynard re-
minds us in her bookPolicing
Black Lives: State Violence in Cana-
da from Slavery to the Present,
there is a long-standing confla-
tion of blackness and criminality.
In practice then, even “race-neu-
tral” policies about policing and
crime have serious, even deadly
effects on black lives. It is in
those places that the legacies of
anti-blackness and colonialism
are keenly felt. Prisons in Canada
are fast becoming sites of injus-
tice, where the most vulnerable
and least-thought-of are held by
the state, and not just black peo-
ple: Indigenous peoples, espe-
cially Indigenous women, and
people with mental-health is-
sues are also affected. Yet, in the
debates about gun violence that
immediately followed the black-
face scandal, anti-black racism
was somehow not a central top-
ic.
The black Canadian vote is no
more, or less, than anyone else’s
vote. I don’t enter a polling sta-
tion to vote for some mythical,
Garvey-esque black nation with-
out Canada. But it is still a deci-
sion that contains my black Can-
adian life, for good or ill.
As a black woman in Canada,
my income is likely to be less
than that of my white peers,
which affects, among other
things, my ability to own a
home. As a black immigrant, the
wealth gap is compounded not
just by my own immigration sta-
tus but by the late-start careers
of my parents and their cohort of
arrivees. And as a person who
falls a lot (I’ve learned a great
deal about how an arm breaks
this year), I’m keenly aware that
universal health care does not
mean universal health out-
comes, especially for black wom-
en.
If we’re going to spend yet an-
other election campaign not
talking about policy, what’s a
black voter to do?

One evening, earlier this sum-
mer, I elbowed my way to the
back of a room in a crowded the-
atre in Toronto’s east end to
meet the NDP candidate for Ha-
milton Centre, Matthew Green.
As the first black city council-
lor in Hamilton, he’d been an
outspoken voice on “street
checks” (basically the same
thing as carding, but sounds like
a nineties-era rap group) while
at city council. Who, I wondered,
would leave the relative inde-
pendence of city politics for the
constraints and frustrations of
federal politics?
CONTINUED ON O9

TheConservatives’AndrewScheerstoppingforaselfieinBrampton,Ont.,LiberalLeaderJustinTrudeauinRichmondHill,Ont.,andtheNDP’sJagmeetSinghataVancouverdaycare.
THECANADIANPRESS/REUTERS/THECANADIANPRESS

Inthiselection,what’sablackvotertodo?


WehavealwaysbeenpartofCanada,VickyM ochamawrites,butatelectiontime,theuniquechallengeswefaceareignored


OPINION

VickyMochamaisaToronto-based
writerandhostoftheSafeSpace
podcast


Asapoliticallyengaged
blackwomanlivingin
Canada,Iwillheadto
mylocalpollingstation
onMonday,butitfeels
likemyballothasbeen
spoiledbeforeit’seven
beencast.

ELECTION2019

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