(and the Choir Ottawa Pretends Not to Conduct)
Canadians love a good myth, especially one that promises to explain the country’s political weather without requiring anyone to step outside and check the sky (it's cold, windy, and will be until there's another election -- if there's another election. After all, they don't appear to be required anymore).
So it was only a matter of time before someone floated the idea that the federal Liberals were “deploying First Nations as a Trojan Horse,” (me). That's a covert ancient wooden contraption rolled up to the gates of public opinion, packed with warriors ready to leap out and silence dissent.
It’s a compelling image, if you’ve never met a First Nation, visited an Indian Reservation (IR), or tried to get two neighbouring band councils to agree on the colour of a stop sign. The Trojan Horse metaphor collapses the moment it encounters the real geography of Indigenous governance.
Canada has 699 inhabited reserves. To make the metaphor work, you’d need 699 identical wooden horses, all built by the same carpenter, all pushed in the same direction, all containing the same soldiers, all acting on the same plan. At that point, the myth doesn’t just fall apart — it becomes performance art.
The truth is far less cinematic and far more Canadian: no single Indigenous political instrument exists. There is no unified command, no secret council, no clandestine alliance waiting to burst from a hollowed‑out cedar monument.
What we have instead is a plethora of First Nations, each with its own history, priorities, grievances, and internal politics — a landscape so diverse that even the term “Indigenous issues” is a bureaucratic oversimplification tilting into fiction.
Myths persist because they’re tidy, pithy, condensed confabulations that people can accept like a pill, or a glass of water when you are parched. Canada has always preferred tidy stories to messy truths. A railroad built a country. Two parties founded the nation. Canada is a bilingual country. And so the Trojan Horse fantasy lingers, mostly among people who find comfort in imagining that Ottawa’s political manoeuvres are influenced by a single, coordinated Indigenous front rather than the usual cocktail of opportunism, symbolism, and federal improvisation.
If you want a metaphor that actually fits the 'Indigenous' narrative of political involvement, you have to leave ancient Greece behind and walk into a concert hall.
Because Ottawa isn’t hiding warriors in a wooden horse. Ottawa is conducting a choir.
Not a disciplined choir, mind you — nothing like the Vienna Boys’ Choir or even a well‑funded church ensemble. This is more like a community choir assembled in a gymnasium with questionable acoustics and a piano that hasn’t been tuned since the Chrétien years.
The conductor raises the baton, and a few voices join in. Others keep singing their own songs. Some refuse to participate. Some walk out. Some show up late. Some demand per diem. Some are still waiting for the federal government to honour a funding agreement from 1983.
And yet, it works, when the microphones are turned on, the audience hears only the voices Ottawa wants you to hear, control by soundman in back of gym.
This is the trick. There's no infiltration, because every act is curated. The federal government doesn’t deploy First Nations as a covert force. It simply turns up the volume on which Nations they want to harmonize with the government's score and turns down the ones who don’t. It’s not a conspiracy. It’s sound engineering.
Whenever the government needs moral insulation — a shield against criticism, a way to frame their opponents as regressive, or a narrative that makes its policies look like justice rather than strategy, the conductor taps the stand, gestures to a section that’s on‑side, and lets the soundman do the rest. The public hears a unified chorus. The reality is a room full of people singing different songs at different tempos, some of them loudly insisting they were never given the sheet music.
This is how 'reconciliation' becomes a political instrument without becoming a conspiracy. It’s not First Nations being used as a Trojan Horse. It’s their voices being mixed, mastered, and broadcast in ways that serve federal interests, which everybody identifies as 'political.'
The government doesn’t need unity. It just needs the tenor of harmony.
Canadians, ever eager for a simple story, nod along. The myth of the Trojan Horse is comforting because it suggests intention, coordination, and strategy. The truth — that Ottawa is improvising its way through a century of broken promises while adjusting the volume knobs — is far less flattering.
Politics as satire lives in a gap between what we’re told and what we can plainly see. What we see is a federal government that treats Indigenous voices like a soundboard: sliders up, sliders down, depending on the political weather. No wooden horses required.
Just a conductor, a microphone, and a country willing to believe the choir is singing the same song, and those vocals are Indigenous.
