Mr. Mackenzie said that the first thing   required of a man
               when he changed from the   Liberal side of the Government side was, to  
               abuse the Globe newspaper, (laughter). It was   satisfactory to find so old a
               member, so willing   to come into the traces of the first Minister of   the
               Crown, and abuse the 
Globe. It was a well  
               known fact that thirty-two or thirty-three Liberal members had been
               brought to the House,   and, in defiance of this gross accusation, he   could
               say that they had not given factious   opposition, but had at all times preferred
               to   meet the Government in an open, manly way.   He would now ask the reason
               why the Union   cause had not in the slightest degree advanced.   It was
               simply because this combination, this   coalition was formed, not to advance the
               Union   cause, but to advance a political party to a   position which they
               might occupy, we were   told, for years to come by the influence of the  
               expenditure for the construction of the Inter-   colonial Railway. He
               would venture to say that   if the Liberal party had been in power from  
               that time to the present, there would have been   at this moment a completed
               Confederation of   all the Provinces of British North America. But   after
               this Parliament had provided the most   liberal terms for Newfoundland and Prince
               Edward Island they had been rejected, and   other Provinces would not join
               the Confederation; and he held that it was because the Government of Canada was distrusted,
               that the   people of the East
               and West, and North and   South declined to have any political association with them
               (hear, hear). He would now   proceed to discuss the
               measures which the   Government saw fit to take, in order, apparently, to secure the
               results they promised long ago.   He recollected that during
               the elections he had   been told that if the Government secured a   majority
               in Parliament there could not be a   doubt the union of the Provinces—union with
               the Maritime Provinces, would be a certainty,   and union with Newfoundland
               and Prince   Edward Island would be a matter not of years   or months, but of
               weeks. He had moved for   correspondence that he expected would show   the
               state of advancement of this union, but to   his extreme surprise he was told
               that no correspondence had taken place (hear, hear). Referring to the negotiations
               for admitting Newfoundland,
               he (Mr. Mackenzie) contended that   the Government had taken entirely wrong  
               ground in offering to assume control of the   public lands of that island. These
               public lands   were claimed by the Anti-Confederates at the   late election
               to be of immense value, and the   mineral lands to be perhaps the most valuable
               upon this Continent, and that the Canadian   Government would get the
               entire benefit of   these riches. He maintained that the Federal   Government
               should have nothing to do with  
               
               62
               COMMONS DEBATES
               February 18, 1870  these lands, and this was the view of
               the people   of Newfoundland. With regard to the accession   of the North
               West, he did not intend to enter   upon a discussion of a personal nature, but he
               had heard reports respecting language said to   have been used by the Hon.
               Secretary of State,   which he must characterize as unwise in the   extreme,
               and unworthy of his position as the   delegate of Canada to that country. These
               reported expressions were only in entire   accordance with his (Mr. Howe's)
               utterances   in this House, where he had said that the single   State of
               Minnesota could turn out more men in   a week than the whole Dominion of Canada,
               to   take and keep possession of this Country. The   indulgence of such
               expressions and sentiments   was not part of wisdom or statesmanship, or  
               prudence, especially on the part of a minister   of the Crown. The hon. gentleman
               must have   known something of the condition of the country, and
               of the feelings of the people, but he   had taken no opportunity of giving any
               information to Mr. McDougall. He had not   endeavoured to
               intercept Mr. McDougall, to   give him information, but had allowed him to  
               go on to Pembina, where he played such a   wretched and humiliating part. He had
               seen   recently the instructions which had been given   to Mr. McDougall, but
               they were without date,   and he would like to know when they were  
               delivered to him.