I'll be there. Hope to see you there, as well.
Month: January 2010
Thompson resigns from cabinet – let the speculation begin
The first big hint we had came in an interview Prime Minister Stephen Harper gave to Brian Lilley, the Ottawa bureau chief for Toronto radio station Newstalk 1010. Asked by Lilley if he'd shuffle his cabinet, he smiled and said "We'll be reviewing everything." The answer prime ministers normally give to such questions is simple, "no".
Some — and I was one — still had some doubts. After all, in an interview with Harper that I and my National Post colleague John Ivison had a couple of days earlier than Lilley's, Harper said he had given each of his ministers comprehensive new "mandate" letters — a cabinet minister's marching orders — that would reflect the new fiscal realities in Ottawa. It would seem unlikely that, after preparing and handing out mandate letters, Harper would let his cabinet waste a few weeks beginning to implement those new instructions only to re-assign each person and have each one start all over again.
Well, let any doubts be put aside for Veterans Affairs Minister Greg Thompson has announced that he is resigning from cabinet, effective immediately. That will almost certainly mean a trip to Rideau Hall and a swearing-in for at least one person next week.
Some other things we've learned from a variety of sources since that Lilley interview are:
- Expect a relatively small shuffle. There are no changes to the big portfolios of Finance, Industry, Environment, Foreign Affairs and National Defence.
- It will likely involve new assignments for Parliamentary Secretaries and Ministers of States.
- It is unlikely that an MP who is not in cabinet will find themselves in cabinet. In other words; Harper is shuffling the cards, if you will, and will not reach into the deck for any new cards.
So let's start with Harper's first task: Find someone from New Brunswick to be that province's minister at the cabinet table. Thompson, whose time as an MP goes back to the days of Brian Mulroney, was cabinet's senior representative from New Brunswick. New Brunswick still has Keith Ashfield, the Frederiction MP and former New Brunswick cabinet minister, who is the minister responsible for the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency. But Ashfield is a Minister of State and not a 'full' cabinet minister. Ministers of state attend cabinet committee meetings but do not attend or vote at full meetings of the cabinet. So, if you are inclined to believe #2 and #3 above, Keith Ashfield gets promoted to full minister. And someone else takes the ACOA wheel. Or, Ashfield takes Veteran Affairs and keeps ACOA. In an earlier cabinet, for example, Peter MacKay was both Foreign Affairs Minister and ACOA minister.
If you do not believe the truth of #3, then you can look to the other five Conservative MPs from New Brunswick. In terms of length of service as an MP, Rob Moore, from Fundy Royal, has the longest tenure next to Thompson's. He is currently the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Justice. I think it likely that he would have the inside track to move up to a minister's position. I also think MP Mike Allen will get some consideration and Harper may also look at Rodney Weston, who was once former New Brunswick premier Bernard Lord's chief aide.
Let's look at some other issues in this cabinet shuffle:
1. Maxime Bernier. Bernier, of course, resigned as foreign affairs minister after leaving top secret NATO documents at his girlfriend's house. In the subsequent election, his constituents forgave all rewarding him with a plurality of votes that was the best in his caucus — better than the MPs from True Blue Alberta! Some Conservatives want Bernier to go back in cabinet so he can get a minister's car and allowances and then proceed to use those resources to be on the road in Quebec as much as possible to beat up the Bloc Quebecois. My sources say Bernier doesn't need to be a cabinet minister to beat up the Bloc and that Harper is not a "second chance" kind of guy. Besides, I'm told, there are other MPs who deserve a chance to be a cabinet minister before Harper starts giving people second cracks. Bottom line: Bernier stays where he is as Chairman of the Commons committee on National Defence.
2. Quebec I had a rumour passed on to me that aides to Denis Lebel, the minister of state responsible for regional development in Quebec, were packing up boxes in his office last week. That Lebel was moving made sense given our earlier intelligence that this shuffle was going to involve ministers of state. It's my sense as well that Lebel has acquitted himself reasonably well in his job. Perhaps he moves to another minister of state assignment or jumps to full cabinet minister. Veterans Affairs might make sense for him, he comes from a riding — Roberval-Lac Saint-Jean — where there is a significant military presence in the form of CFB Bagotville, where our fighter jets are stationed. Of courrse, they could have just been putting in stuff in boxes while Lebel had his office painted over the break! My gut feeling: Lebel is moving.
3. Clement A Conservative political aide told me that Clement had been in to see Harper about his portfolio. Clement, I can assure you, is not moving from his job as Industry Minister but he does have two junior ministers with him: Secretary of State for Tourism and Small Business Diane Ablonczy and Secretary of State for Science and Technology Gary Goodyear. Was Harper talking to Clement about a move for Ablonczy or Goodyear? Ablonczy, you'll remember, was stripped of funding decisions after she gave Toronto's Pride Festival — the celebration of queer culture in that city — hundreds of thousands of dollars and that angered the far-right in the caucus like Saskatoon's Brad Trost. And Goodyear has come under for losing his temper and yelling and screaming at the academics and stakeholders he's supposed to work with. Goodyear, a chiropractor and evangelical Christian, has also taken jabs for his apparent lukewarm commitment to the science of evolution. My call: The move involves eitehr or both of Ablonczy and Goodyear.
4. Raitt There is some buzz on the Hill that Natural Resources Minister Lisa Raitt is going to be demoted, that she will be punished for the gaffe of aides who left tape recorders and documents lying around and other aides who apparently raised political campaign money for her using the resources of the federal Toronto Port Authority, where Raitt was once CEO. I am discounting this rumours. Raitt is in the midst of a very big file right now: Getting the isotope production back on at the NRU and then selling off AECL. On her core mandate, she's moving those files forward and communicates on those files relatively well. That's more important to Harper than those other brushfires and, in any event, demoting her would signal to his political opponents that Raitt really had done something wrong. That, in turn, would allow Harper's political opponents to question his judgement in putting her in cabinet in the first place and, quite simply, Harper will not allow his opponents to have that opening. My call: Raitt stays put.
That's about all I've got right now but please chip in with your gossip and commentary below.
Tags: #JanCab, cabinet shuffle, Stephen Harper, Maxime Bernier, Lisa Raitt, Tony Clement, Denis Lebel, Gary Goodyear, Diane Ablonczy, Greg Thompson, Keith Ashfield
SRO for Ignatieff in Vancouver
Liberals are pretty excited this evening. Not only is there a new poll out that shows that Prime Minister Stephen Harper may have miscalculated that Canadians don't care much about Parliament being prorogued — EKOS Research says a 15 point lead the Conservatives had a few weeks ago is now a lead within the statistical margin of error — but, this afternoon at the University of British Columbia, 200 people had to be turned away from the hall Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff was speaking in because 800 had already filled it up. Those numbers, by the way, are provided to us by Ignatieff aides and we do not have independent verification.
“Waiting for Michael Ignatieff's arrival at the UBC town hall, line-ups around the building. Anticipation is high!,” Vancouver-Quadra MP Joyce Murray posted on Twitter.
Still, the Libs did send along a pic (left). Still, as Vancouver Sun columnist notes, the Liberals still have a lot of work cut out for them despite this bump in the polls. And EKOS main man Frank Graves reminds Libs that, “The Liberals continue to be stuck in the sub-30% zone. They are well within reach of the Conservatives now, but the movements in public opinion seem to be driven more by repulsion to Conservative tactics than attraction to Mr. Ignatieff and the Liberal Party.”
Citing legal loophole, ethics czar won't rule on allegations of partisan ad spending
Parliament's ethics commissioner has dropped an investigation into allegations by a Liberal MP that the federal government used taxpayer dollars for advertising programs that were thinly disguised attempts to promote the Conservative party.
Ethics Commissioner Mary Dawson concluded in a "discontinuance report" [PDF] released Wednesday that federal conflict-of-interest legislation did not apply in the context of a complaint made by Liberal MP Martha Hall Findlay.
"This decision flies in the face of the very purpose of the Conflict of Interest Act," Hall Findlay responded Wednesday.
"We are concerned that the ethics commissioner is constrained by the current atmosphere of intimidation by the Prime Minister's Office. The commissioner declined to pursue this matter based entirely on a technicality. She has not addressed any of the substance of the allegation."
Hall Findlay had complained to Dawson that a $60-million advertising campaign ostensibly designed by the federal government to tell Canadians about its economic action plan bore a too-similar design in terms of its presentation to advertising campaigns mounted over the past few years by the Conservative Party of Canada.
"The original ethics complaint will go down on the long list of Liberal stunts that generate media hysteria, but amount to nothing in the end," Conservative MP Pierre Poilievre said in an e-mailed statement.
"Prime Minister (Stephen) Harper's government has acted with the highest standards of ethics and today's report shows that these Liberal smears were false."
But non-partisan advocacy group Democracy Watch slammed Dawson's ruling.
"Very unfortunately, the ethics commissioner has used every possible technical loophole she can find to let the ruling party and cabinet ministers off the hook for what are fairly clear violations of federal ethics rules," said executive director Duff Conacher. "It's a fairly ridiculous ruling." [Read the rest of the story]
Tags: parliament, ethics, democracy watch
The world responds to Haiti; Alberta cabinet shuffle: Thursday's top headlines and Parliamentary daybook
The world responds to Haiti and Alberta's premier shuffles the cabinet. Listen to my two-minute audio roundup of what's on the front pages of the country's newspapers plus highlights from Thursday's Parliamentary daybook by clicking on the link below.
You can also get these audio summaries automatically every day via podcast from iTunes or via an RSS feed by subscribing to my AudioBoo stream. Both the iTunes link and the RSS link are at my profile at AudioBoo.fm. Look under my picture on the left hand side of the page.
Tags: national post, globe and mail, toronto star, haiti, ed stelmach
Haiti earthquake; cruel conditions in an Edmonton jail; and the power of curling: Wednesday's headlines and Parliamentary daybook
A powerful earthquake decimates Haiti, a judge calls conditions in an Edmonton jail "cruel and unusual" punishment, and the Scotties Tournament of Hearts boosts the economy.Listen to my three-minute audio roundup of what's on the front pages of the country's newspapers plus highlights from Wednesday's Parliamentary daybook by clicking on the link below.
You can also get these audio summarie automatically every day via podcast from iTunes or via an RSS feed by subscribing to my AudioBoo stream. Both the iTunes link and the RSS link are at my profile at AudioBoo.fm. Look under my picture on the left hand side of the page.
Tags: national post, globe and mail, toronto star, haiti, earthquake
A former Harper mentor: Government has "no credibility" on prorogue excuses
Tom Flanagan, the University of Calgary political science professor, was an early and influential force in Stephen Harper's political career. Flanagan was one of the key organizers behind Harper's first-ever leadership race, to win the Canadian Alliance against Stockwell Day. He would eventually go on to be the national campaign manager for the Conservative Party's first election in 2004. He's been “outside the tent”, as they say, for a couple of years now, partly because he's been occasionally critical of Harper as prime minister.
On Monday, on CBC's Power and Politics show, Flanagan had some remarkably frank things to say about Harper's decision to prorogue. You can watch the whole segment at CBC's site. Here are some excerpts:
FLANAGAN: … the government's talking points really don't have much credibility. Everybody knows that Parliament was prorogued in order to shut down the Afghan inquiry, and the trouble is that the government doesn't want to explain why that was necessary. Personally I think it was a highly defensible action, but instead of having an adult defence of it, the government comes up with these childish talking points. So then you try and backfill with other stuff that doesn't make much sense either. So it's a self-created problem.
Host Evan Solomon: You said there's good reasons he could have justified the prorogation of Parliament. What are those reasons? You called it he could have had an adult conversation. What is that conversation?
FLANAGAN: Well, the conduct of foreign policy and military affairs constitutionally belongs to the executive. That's why the Governor General is, for example, commander-in-chief of the armed forces. You can't fight a war by direction from backbench MPs of the opposition. The opposition parties are trying to make political capital out of something that happened several years ago.
It's not surprising that the Bloc (Quebecois) would do it because they don't believe in Canada. So they don't mind trying to damage the Canadian Forces. And the NDP doesn't believe in force, so I guess it's not surprising that they would. But it's the Liberals that created the mission in Afghanistan. It's the Liberals that created the transfer agreement under which these alleged atrocities happened. So I think it's shameful for the Liberals to be trying to politicize it as they have, and I think that if the Prime Minister would explain this and go on the counterattack against the liberals, I think it would work. But he's — as he sometimes does — he likes simple talking points about [the] Olympics or whatever the talking point of the day is and it skirts — just avoids the real issue. I'd rather see the debate joined on the real issue but looks like it's not going to happen at least for a while.
Cabinet shuffle rumours, a jobless recovery and a hate crime suspect: Tuesday's newspaper headlines and Parliamentary daybook
Rumours about a federal cabinet shuffle, concerns about Canada's jobless recovery, and a hate crime suspect spends more time in jail: Listen to my four-minute audio roundup of what's on the front pages of the country's newspapers plus highlights from Monday's Parliamentary daybook by clicking on the link below.
You can also get these audio summaries automatically every day via podcast from iTunes or via an RSS feed by subscribing to my AudioBoo stream. Both the iTunes link and the RSS link are at my profile at AudioBoo.fm. Look under my picture on the left hand side of the page.
Tags: national post, cabinet, globe and mail, economy, toronto star, jim flaherty
The perils of Yemen; politics in Kabul; and the Olympic torch: Monday's top headlines and Parliamentary daybook
Yemen's securityproblems, a political standoff in Afghanistan and the Olympic torch makes its way through Saskatchewanl: Listen to my four-minute audio roundup of what's on the front pages of the country's newspapers plus highlights from Monday's Parliamentary daybook by clicking on the link below.
You can also get these audio summarie automatically every day via podcast from iTunes or via an RSS feed by subscribing to my AudioBoo stream. Both the iTunes link and the RSS link are at my profile at AudioBoo.fm. Look under my picture on the left hand side of the page.
Tags: national post, yemen, globe and mail, afghanistan, toronto star, dalton mcguinty
Cabinet minister's brother says Canadians not taking kindly to Parliament "being hijacked"
Arthur Kent, the brother of junior foreign affairs minister Peter Kent, is less than impressed with what his brother's boss has done so far as the House of Commons is concerned.
"Canadians are often dismissed as being big on beer and hockey but largely apathetic about politics. But a mounting Facebook protest shows that while “Hosers” can hardly be called policy wonks, they’re not taking kindly to their “house of the people” being hijacked by the leader of a parliamentary minority," Arthur Kent writes on his SkyReporter.com blog. "Why have more than 130,000 Canucks set their Mooseheads aside to join a Facebook group called Canadians Against Proroguing Parliament?"
Tags: afghanistan, prorogue, house of commons, arthur kent, peter kent