Despite his name, former Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper was not a friend of the harp seals. Neither was his fisheries minister, Gail Shea.
In the last few years of her term, Shea established a kill quota of 400,000 harp seal pups, knowing full well that the market for seal pelts afforded sealers the opportunity to kill only about 10% of this number of seals.
The Harper government promoted sealing to satisfy the Newfoundland fishing lobby.
However, during a previous Liberal administration of Prime Minister Jean Chrétien, efforts were made to bring the Inuit into this contentious issue since Canadians today make great efforts to respect indigenous peoples of Canada.
An administration official, Mark Saigeon, of the United States Transboundary Division in the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, wrote a memo that was leaked to IFAW, in which he said that meeting attendees "recommended Canada play the Nunavut Inuit card as leverage..."
The Chrétien administration did not succeed at this (or perhaps did not put much effort into it), but Justin Trudeau's administration has made this their focal point on the sealing issue. Little can be heard in his administration about the "poor Newfoundland fisherman." Instead, the propaganda is put forth that this is an Inuit issue; that sealing must continue to protect their livelihood.
Trudeau's government is developing a "certification program" to promote Inuit commercial sealing and trade with the European Union. If only Inuit sealing and the Inuit's ability to trade in seal pelts internationally is concerning to the administration, as Trudeau develops this certification program, his administration should be willing to put an end to commercial sealing in Newfoundland and the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Trudeau has made no moves in this direction, however. Read more on how Inuit sealing relates to the commercial seal hunt.
Although Trudeau's Liberal party platform states, "We will use scientific evidence and the precautionary principle, and take into account climate change, when making decisions affecting fish stocks and ecosystem management," his administration has ignored serious environmental issues that commercial sealing presents.
The government's own scientists have stated that many seal pups are drowning as a result of climate change and the very poor sea ice conditions that it is causing. Despite this, the Trudeau government allows the seal 'hunt' to continue, even in the areas most affected by poor sea ice.
The Trudeau government also continues to provide commercial sealing subsidies even though the 'hunt' is not economically viable. In 2018, Canada's Department of Fisheries and Oceans paid furriers to fly salespeople to China, Japan, and Italy to promote seal skins, and the Fur Institute of Canada received $157,586 to create a marketing strategy for seal fur and to bring food critics to their Seal Fest event. The main seal skin processor, Carino, also received $52,625 of citizens' hard-earned tax money to produce seal fur propaganda.
The rest of Canada's Parliament is no friend of seals, either. In the upper house, Sen. Céline Hervieux-Payette has been promoting sealing for years, with little opposition. Her bill, S-208, to create a holiday to celebrate the seal 'hunt' and seal skins passed in the Parliament and received royal assent.
Read what Canada's MPs had to say and find out how they voted on S-208.
Or read excerpts from their speeches.
One Canadian politician has stood out as a champion of the seals: Senator Mac Harb. In 2009, Sen. Harb witnessed the slaughter with IFAW observers. He said, "Continuing to defend the commercial seal hunt is not the answer.The government can’t go on burying its head in the sand and pretending everything is going to be okay. It is time to provide mechanisms to transition the few thousand individuals in sealing out of this declining industry and into jobs with more promising futures."
"I plan to go back next year and every year until this hunt ends to catalogue the wastefulness of this hunt. I have an obligation to the majority of Canadians who oppose the hunt to be a witness to this waste of tax-dollars and a vocal advocate for its swift conclusion," he added. Read more from Sen. Harb here.
Harb retired from the Senate in 2013.
Sen. Harb has taken a stand by introducing a bill into Canada's Senate: S-207 Ending the Commercial Seal Hunt in Canada
"On March 9, 2010 I re-introduced legislation in the Senate which, by amending The Fisheries Act, will effectively end the commercial seal hunt in Canada while respecting treaty obligations and protecting the rights of Canada’s aboriginal people," Sen. Harb said.
Read more about the "End the Commercial Seal Hunt in Canada S-207" Senate bill here.
In 2012, another bill was introduced by Harb, Senate Bill S-210. This time, another Senator seconded the motion, allowing the bill to go on to a debate. On October 16, 2012, Sen. Harb delivered a speech during the second reading of the bill, urging the Canadian Senate to end the seal hunt by passing this bill. Read the speech and debate that followed here.
Thus far the bill has not passed the Canadian Senate.