We talked a little bit about that before, some years ago. There have been recommendations from all kinds of sources—the Ipperwash commission and so on—dealing with land claims.
The central problem around the land claims business is that a standard government department is part of the Political Science 101 definition of government. You make decisions. Where there are differences of opinion, somebody has the authority ultimately to make a decision. Governments are elected. They have a mandate to make decisions—within the law, certainly—and if you don't like it, you can vote for the other guy, you can write a letter to the editor, you can protest on Parliament Hill, you can do all kinds of things. But it's a legitimate function of government, in general, to make decisions within the law about contentious matters. We all know that, and that's fine.
Indian Affairs is a government department that does that. They may decide that times are tough and that the housing budget is going down a little, and people may not like it. Fine, there are all those ways to address it--come here and give you guys trouble.
When it comes to a treaty that has a treaty land entitlement, or to an aboriginal and treaty right, or to the implementation of the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement, those are not suitable things for making discretionary decisions. The Supreme Court has said that treaties and land claims agreements create enforceable obligations. Carrying out your duties under a contract is a different matter. It requires a different mindset from that used when exercising discretion on behalf of an elected government with a mandate to make discretionary decisions.
It seems to me that dealing with the treaties, dealing with land claims agreements—those kinds of issues—could be handled by a bureaucracy, accountable obviously to elected people but nonetheless separate, whose mindset was not administering discretionary programs but carrying out obligations--carrying them out properly, but carrying them out. It's a different thing.
The land claims are based upon claims of aboriginal title, or treaty land entitlement, or aboriginal rights more generally to use traditional territory. They're not based on thinking that unemployment insurance rates should go up, or that the benefits should be adjusted up or down, or those kinds of tough political decision that are legitimately within the discretion of government to make. They are things you can go to court to fight about and win.