Politics·Analysis

The news from Kamloops shook this country. Will it change anything?

Few recent events have rattled this country more profoundly than the reported discovery of the remains of more than 200 children on the grounds of a former residential school in B.C.

If 'Canadians are waking up,' as Perry Bellegarde claims, the political middle ground is about to shift

People embrace in front of the Centennial Flame on Parliament Hill June 4, 2021 at a memorial for the 215 children whose remains are believed to have been found at the grounds of the former Kamloops Indian Residential School. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

"Canadians are waking up," Assembly of First Nations National Chief Perry Bellegarde told Rosemary Barton Live this weekend. "Governments are waking up."

That awakening is overdue. By no means should it have taken the reported discovery of the remains of 215 children on the site of a former residential school in Kamloops, British Columbia to make people face up to the injustices of the past and the need for reconciliation in the present.

But Kamloops appears to have left a particularly deep impression on Canadians — more so than many other recent events. The question is how that affects the political debate going forward.

Awareness of what happened in Kamloops is widespread. Seventy-seven per cent of respondents to a recent poll by Innovative Research Group said they were "very familiar" or "somewhat familiar" with the reports of human remains. That level of impact vastly exceeds what Innovative Research found in years past when it asked about other major tragedies.

Shortly after the national inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls released its final report in 2019, just 48 per cent of poll respondents claimed to be familiar with the issue. In 2015, only 41 per cent said they were familiar with the work of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission on residential schools.

Shocked and angry

Given what the TRC reported six years ago, the news out of Kamloops shouldn't have come as a surprise to anyone. But another survey — conducted by Abacus Data and commissioned by the Assembly of First Nations and the Canadian Race Relations Foundation — suggests the report of 215 dead children did shake Canadians.

Thirty-six per cent of respondents to the Abacus survey agreed with this statement: "I knew it was bad, but not this bad." Another 32 per cent agreed with this one: "I was shocked, I had no idea things were that bad at residential schools and so many children could die."

Cowichan Tribe member Benny George holds his son Bowie, 3, as they listen during a ceremony and vigil for the 215 children whose remains were found buried at the former Kamloops Indian Residential School, in Vancouver, B.C., on National Indigenous Peoples Day, Monday, June 21, 2021. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Eighty-one per cent of respondents to the Innovative Research survey said they felt "very angry" or "somewhat angry" about what they had heard. Fifty-eight per cent told Abacus they agreed that what happened at residential schools was "genocide."

There are also signs in the survey data that Canadians want action.

According to Innovative Research, 68 per cent of Canadians agree that residential schools "created issues that still require government responses today." Sixty-three per cent say the federal government should be doing more to address the problems facing Indigenous peoples — that's up 17 points since 2019. Sixty-eight per cent strongly or somewhat agree that Canadians have a "duty" to resolve the inequalities faced by Indigenous peoples — up 11 points since 2019.

Attitudes are shifting — slowly

Sixty-two percent of respondents to Abacus said students in their province don't learn enough about residential schools.

But the data also show the potential for future conflict.

Support for the idea that Indigenous peoples should have the final say over projects like pipelines that travel through their traditional territories is up 17 points in the Innovative Research poll — but it's still only supported by 45 per cent of respondents.

The same percentage say they fear that giving Indigenous peoples a "potential veto" over projects would slow down development in their province. Forty per cent either strongly or somewhat agree that "if we hand over project approval rights to Canada's Indigenous peoples, it will threaten jobs and economic development in my community."

It also seems that governments struggle to claim victory on the broad issue of reconciliation — perhaps rightfully so.

Justin Trudeau and Stephen Harper take part in a foreign policy debate during the 2015 election campaign. Harper's approach to the Indigenous-Crown relationship polled badly. Trudeau's approach is viewed more positively — but not by much. (Mark Blinch/Reuters)

In 2014, Stephen Harper's last full year as prime minister, the federal government's net approval rating for managing Indigenous peoples' issues was minus-34 per cent (14 per cent approved, 46 per cent disapproved). By 2019, Justin Trudeau's fourth year as prime minister, that rating had improved to minus-15 per cent.

After Kamloops, net approval has slipped back to minus-24 per cent.

Perhaps those numbers simply indicate the massive hole that Canada is now trying to climb out of. But even if it's hard to show progress — and even if opinions vary somewhat across partisan lines — it's not clear that any party can afford to ignore the pursuit of reconciliation any longer.

"Within every parties' coalition are voters who care about this," said Greg Lyle, the pollster behind Innovative Research.

For Trudeau, that means playing defence on his own record and trying to show as much progress as possible. In the last month, the government has passed legislation that responds to three of the TRC's calls to action and completed a fourth by appointing an Indigenous languages commissioner.

A 'character test' for the PM

The prime minister's challenge is always to answer the charge that he has not been as good as his lofty words. Lyle said reconciliation could become a "character test" for Trudeau.

But if Trudeau must explain why his government deserves to keep trying, his rivals also owe it to Canadians to explain how, exactly, they would make reconciliation happen faster, or better. If an election happens this fall, the parties' platforms could be a measure of how seriously they take reconciliation.

But the upshot of these polls might be that governments of any stripe can expect a wave of public pressure if they delay or avoid taking action.

If Kamloops laid bare the moral obligation to act, popular opinion could now enforce a political obligation. If Kamloops was a wake-up call, it should be much harder to go back to sleep now.

Innovative Research Group conducted an online survey between June 3 and June 8. The sample size is 1,043 and results are weighted by age, gender and region, but a margin of error cannot be calculated because it was not a random probability sample.

Abacus Data surveyed 3,000 people between June 4 and June 8 and weighted results according to age, gender, educational attainment and region. Abacus Data says "the margin of error for a comparable probability-based random sample of the same size is plus or minus 1.76, 19 times out of 20."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Aaron Wherry

Senior writer

Aaron Wherry has covered Parliament Hill since 2007 and has written for Maclean's, the National Post and the Globe and Mail. He is the author of Promise & Peril, a book about Justin Trudeau's years in power.