Rising political stars lose their candour on the way up

This passage in a column by Ezra Klein stuck out for me:

Ryan was, for awhile, my favorite interview, as he was willing to do something most politicians weren’t: Have a free-ranging, substantive, on-the-record conversation with someone who doesn’t agree with him. As he rose through the ranks of the Republican Party, his press strategy changed, and he ended those interviews. Our most recent back-and-forth, which was over his Medicare plan, was conducted, at the insistence of his office, over the relative safety of e-mail.

via What I learned debating Paul Ryan.

This is my experience Continue reading Rising political stars lose their candour on the way up

Huawei's problem? It ain't the secret backdoors but wide-open front doors

Huawei sales booth in China
Photo: Reuters/Stringer

Chinese telecom equipment maker Huawei is under fire, as colleague Jessica Murphy reports:

Huawei sells mobile technology to companies that include Bell Canada, Telus, Wind Mobile, Sasktel and Ice Wireless, but has come under intense scrutiny following a recent scathing report from a U.S. congressional committee outlining cyber-espionage concerns with Huawei and another global telecom company, ZTE.

Meanwhile, at a conference in Asia for computer security and IT types, Continue reading Huawei's problem? It ain't the secret backdoors but wide-open front doors

How do you feel about the economy? Canadians are ok. Yanks, Brits "despondent"

Pollster Angus Reid is out with a comparative survey of consumer confidence in Canada, the U.S. and Britain.

In the online survey of representative national samples, most Canadians 63% rate the current economic conditions in their country as “very good” or “good.”In the United States, only one-in-five respondents 20% feel the country’s economic conditions are positive. In Britain, the level of confidence is in the single digits 9%. Continue reading How do you feel about the economy? Canadians are ok. Yanks, Brits "despondent"

Why Conservatives crow about Harper's economic stewardship

Off the top of my head, I can’t think of any Canadian prime minister who had it as good as Stephen Harper did on their first day in office when it came to the state of the federal government’s finances. In the winter of 2006, the Canadian economy was doing well and the government’s coffers were overflowing with surpluses.

The world has considerably changed since 2006, of course, and now, the opposition narrative is something along the lines of “Harper has squandered the good fortune given him and run up the country’s biggest ever deficits.”

Selected Advanced Economies Real OutputAnd yet, by accident or design, Continue reading Why Conservatives crow about Harper's economic stewardship

Why Obama lost to the Rockefeller Republican and other tales

A couple of pieces that caught my eye in the wake of the first U.S. presidential debate in Denver on Wednesday night.

First, Matt Miller, who worked in the Clinton White House, writes in the Washington Post that on Wednesday, “at long last came the full-throated return of the Rockefeller Republican many suspect is Romney’s true political nature.” Miller goes on to say:

If he wins, of course, Romney and his advisers will be hailed as geniuses for their timing, for bonding the party faithful to the ticket with the choice of Paul Ryan and a conservative-themed convention, and then dashing to the center for the home stretch.

Read the rest  Matt Miller: The audacity of Romney – The Washington Post.

Here’s David Frum, Continue reading Why Obama lost to the Rockefeller Republican and other tales

Want to succeed in politics? Take a lot of questions from those pesky reporters!

Writing in the Washington Post today, columnist Dana Milbank argues that one of the reasons Obama delivered such a dismal performance in the debate this week is that he doesn’t get enough practice responding to challenging questions, practice he would have got if he spent more time taking questions from reporters:

Obama has set a modern record for refusal to be quizzed by the media, taking questions from reporters far less often than Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and even George W. Bush. Though his opponent in 2008 promised to take questions from lawmakers like the British prime minister does, Obama has shied from mixing it up with members of Congress, too. And, especially since Rahm Emanuel’s departure, Obama is surrounded by a large number of yes men who aren’t likely to get in his face.

This insularity led directly to the Denver debacle: Obama was out of practice and unprepared to be challenged

via Dana Milbank: President Obama doesn’t meet the press – The Washington Post.

And, as Milbank explains in that piece, even in one-on-one interviews, Obama largely controls the subject of those interviews.

And, as I’ve blogged in this space before, (See: “When it comes to press relations, do you like Obama or Harper?”) when he does do a White House press conference Obama almost always knows exactly what question is coming from what reporter because reporters must cough up their question to Obama’s aides if they want Obama to pick them at the press conference.

All of which should be a good lesson for you aspiring and current politicians out there: Your best debate prep is taking a lot of questions often from us pesky reporters!

NDP Nexen decision a boneheaded political move

Today, the federal NDP held a Parliament Hill press conference during which MPs Peter Julian and Hélène LeBlanc announced, for the first time, that New Democrats believe the federal government ought to reject a $15-billion bid by the Chinese state-owned firm CNOOC for the Calgary-based oil-and-gas producer Nexen. 

In doing this, they certainly have public opinion on their side. Two Abacus Data polls commissioned by Sun News Network show the idea of the Chinese taking over Nexen is deeply unpopular in every region of the country and among supporters of all parties. (Poll 1 | Poll 2)

This was a boneheaded move politically from a party that, in my judgement, has made some otherwise very smart moves to counter any number of stereotypes its political opponents are trying to foster that an NDP government would kill jobs, investment and prosperity.

Continue reading NDP Nexen decision a boneheaded political move

So, President Kikwete, can you help us work through our Nexen problem?

Jakaya Kikwete and Stephen Harper
OTTAWA – Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete “schools me” after I asked today how his government would handle a foreign investment opportunity from a country that doesn’t share Tanzania’s and Canada’s democratic values. This pic was snapped in 237-C of the House of Commons by PMO photographer Jason Ransom.

The Tanzanian President, Jakaya Kikwete, is in Canada this week on an official visit. This afternoon, after meeting with Prime Minister Stephen Harper, the two men took some questions from reporters. The press were allotted a total of four questions, two from each country’s press corps. The Canadian press corps gets further subdivided into one English-language question and one French-language question. Hélène Buzzetti of Le Devoir asked the French-language question,  a question that was really only for Harper as it was about the Port of Montreal. The English-language reporters — CP, Bloomberg, Toronto Star, Reuters, Postmedia and Sun — came to a consensus that we wanted to ask Harper about the Nexen deal and I drew the straw to put the question to the PM. But, given that Tanzania also relies heavily on foreign investment to develop its resource sector, I thought it would be interesting to hear President Kikwete’s views on how Tanzania handles investment proposals from companies that originate in countries, like China, that do not share Tanzania’s democratic values.  Continue reading So, President Kikwete, can you help us work through our Nexen problem?

The Harper-Tanzania connection

Tanzanian school children greet Prime Minister Harper
DAR ES SALAAM – A mob of singing Tanzanian school children greeted Prime Minister Stephen Harper during his 2007 visit to Tanzania. (DAVID AKIN)

Prime Minister Stephen Harper hosts Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete on Parliament Hill this afternoon. It’s not the first time the two men have met. In fact, their personal relationship goes back to 2007, when Harper made his first trip to the African continent as Prime Minister. Harper was in Africa then to attend the 2007 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Kampala, Uganda. I was part of the press contingent that travelled with Harper to cover that meeting.

Continue reading The Harper-Tanzania connection