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NorthOpinion

Now, more than ever, the N.W.T. government needs party politics

The Norn affair is the clearest evidence yet that the consensus system of government is powerless to address its own failings, writes former MLA and politics commentator Kieron Testart.

The consensus system is ... powerless to address its own failings, writes former MLA Kieron Testart

Looking down on a government assembly, with people at a circle of tables in a large room.
The N.W.T. Legislative Assembly on Tuesday, Nov. 23, Steve Norn's last day in the House. The Norn affair is the clearest evidence yet that the consensus system of government is powerless to address its own failings, writes former MLA and politics commentator Kieron Testart. (Travis Burke/CBC)

This column is an opinion by former Yellowknife MLA Kieron Testart.For more information about CBC's Opinion section, please see the FAQ.

In 2019 near the end of my term as an MLA, I proposed implementing a caucus system that, among other things, would allow for political discipline of MLAs. At the time MLAs rejected any changes that would limit their jealously-guarded independence. What they failed to recognize was that this proposal was not about imposing discipline, rather it was aboutenabling politicians to effectively discipline MLAs when required.

The Nornaffair and the pronounced lack of any real accountability in the legislature over the government's failings are the consequences of being governed by a gang of loosely aligned political independents who lack common vision and leadership.

This point was made by MLA Rylund Johnson who said, "In party systems, the party whip would probably make sure this never happens. Party caucuses would kick members out and make them irrelevant Those aren't tools that we have in consensus government."

The consensus system is based on little more than good intentions and is powerless to address its own failings, with MLAs routinely using their constituents as a convenient smoke screen for their own bad behaviour.

Sound familiar? It should, it happens all the time with the recent example of Steve Norn being the most spectacular failure of political will to date in the 19th Assembly.

Norn's sustained attacks on his colleagues and the legislature were left virtually unchecked by MLAs, who stood by silently. Public confidence in elected officials has been shaken to the point that two former premiers have taken the extraordinarystep of publicly criticizingsitting MLAs. Scandal and policy failures have become the chief commodity of the Legislative Assembly and Caroline Cochrane's government.

While other provinces acted swiftly with new spending and policies to bolster their economies and attract new health-care workers, the Cochrane government has wrung its hands, paralyzed by bureaucratic inertia. We have watched in real time as our health-care system has buckled and broken under the strain of the pandemic, with no plan yet released for economic recovery after months and months of delay. And despite the outcry from Northerners for their government to act, the "unofficial opposition" of regular MLAs is absent, or at least silent, unable to muster the courage and unify to demand better government from the cabinet.

In the Northwest Territories the people have a choice in who gets to take power but not in how that power is used, nor can they hold the powerful accountable during elections. MLAs appoint the premier and cabinet, who are solely accountable to each other. This means that voters have no say over who forms government or what that government does for its four-year term and cannot hold that government accountable for its decisions. This leaves accountability in the hands of an undisciplined committee of regular MLAs who lack resources, staff, and experience to provide alternatives to cabinet policies. Public policy development and implementation are the sole domain of unelected bureaucrats in the government's senior management.

Despite the constant mythologizing of consensus government as a superior form of government, founded in the traditions of Indigenous Peoples, the fact is none of the N.W.T.'s self-governingIndigenous nations use consensus systems, nor did Indigenous people design the system when it was first implemented decades ago. That honour falls to federal bureaucrats when they devolved responsible government to our young territory. Despite their frustration, Northerners continue to consent to an undemocratic democracy where their electoral choices have been reduced to little more than an overblown hiring competition.

A culture of silence has taken root in the N.W.T.'s democratic discourse. The fear of reprisal from those in power forces many to whisper in the back of coffee shops and speak anonymously to reporters, when they ought to be able to freely express their own views and see those views transformed into political action.

There was a time that the consensus system served Northerners well. But that time has passed, made clear by persistent scandal and public policy implosions that have not stopped since the last election. We've seen devolution create a modern N.W.T. granted nearly full responsibility over its land and resources. It is now time for evolution to transform our political system into a modern multi-party democracy that can provide unity and real action on the most pressing issues.