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Convivium was a project of Cardus 2011‑2022, and is preserved here for archival purposes.
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A Message From ManningA Message From Manning

A Message From Manning

Publisher Peter Stockland sits down with Dr. Andrew Bennett on the eve of the 2017 Manning Conference. 

Peter Stockland
2 minute read

Andrew Bennett will take his message this weekend to the country’s largest annual conservative gathering but won’t be opining about the Tory leadership or the Trumping of Canada.

The former Canadian ambassador for religious freedom, now program director for Cardus Law and a senior fellow with the think tank, will make the argument to delegates to the Manning Centre Networking Conference it’s “imperative” they grasp the importance of protecting spiritual belief and practices.

“Religious freedom as a fundamental freedom relates to how we understand ourselves as human beings,” Bennett told Convivium. “Religious freedom links directly to many other fundamental freedoms.

 Bennett is one of two Cardus program directors featured at this year’s Manning conference. Beth Green, program director for Cardus Education, will be on a panel with Deani Van Pelt of the Fraser Institute to ask whether school choice should be a priority for Canadian conservatives.

The Manning Centre Conference is billed as a “big tent” gathering for conservatives and Conservatives of all stripes. But while the 900 registered delegates this year will rub shoulders at the Ottawa Convention Centre in apparent common cause, there is always a feeling of all-in-the-family contestation between social conservatives and libertarians, professional politicians and grass roots purists.

The program for the 2017 version of the nine-year-old event is heavy on panel sessions such as “Down With The Elites,” “Digital Winners and Losers in the U.S. Election” and the “Future of Alberta Conservatism.” Suppression of dissent on Canadian university campuses also gets attention, as does the idea of pulling the plug on the CBC. Candidates for the federal Conservative party leadership will stage a two-hour debate this afternoon.

Bennett, who speaks Saturday morning and will by interviewed after his presentation by Cardus Executive Vice-President Ray Pennings, welcomes the opening to talk a about religious freedom at an otherwise thoroughly political/policy event.

Sustaining freedom of belief is becoming a crucial concern on both sides of the Canada-U.S. border, and requires thoughtful response across the whole political spectrum, Bennett says.

Cardus Law has just released an academic research paper from the director of the Religious Freedom Institute at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. Thomas Farr examines in the paper how American understanding of religious freedom is affected by the “free exercise clause” of the U.S. Constitution. Bennett notes many of its broad findings should get noticed in Canada. 

“The Farr paper links directly to some of the challenges being experienced here in Canada,” he says. “We do see some common points of tension around the position of people of faith and faith communities generally in our public life.

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