Saturday, May 09, 2009

An Insight Into Reality Coalitions

Who runs the country? Elected officials or appointed mandarins? Yes Minister.........

Another victory for hired guns
May 09, 2009

Ottawa

Pity the poor country. Just when it needs help most, the man who knows its finances best is walking away, leaving the worst crisis in modern times to a faux-economist prime minister and Conservative operatives.

Kevin Lynch's sudden retirement from the most powerful and prestigious job the federal civil service offers is loaded with troubling implications. It marks a decisive victory for hired party guns over public servants, further concentrates power in Stephen Harper's concentric circle and maps the route to the next federal election.

All of that and more flows from the curious departure of an accomplished, complex and controversial mandarin little known outside this capital. Announced with the Prime Minister conveniently abroad, the move ends the no-prisoners struggle between Lynch and Guy Giorno, Harper's corrosive chief of staff, while sending confusing messages to public servants Conservatives badly need to deliver their multi-billion-dollar economic stimulus.

That dysfunctional past and demanding future will test Wayne Wouters, the career bureaucrat replacing Lynch. Well-liked and well-travelled in Ottawa's back corridors, Wouters must satisfy Conservatives obsessing on the coming campaign while reassuring colleagues demoralized by their diminishing policy role and by the increasing intrusion of politics on a civil service that once prided itself on speaking truth to power.

An anecdote connects those forces. It's murmured here that Lynch differs from his predecessors in an important way. They kept their resignation letters ready to deliver if prime ministers crossed the line between cynical politics and national interests. Lynch would more happily deliver deputy ministers' resignation letters if they failed to jump high enough to please his political masters. Apocryphal or mean, the story crystallizes a fundamental change in how Ottawa functions. Once expected to find and hold the fine balance between advising cabinet and protecting the public service, Privy Council clerks are now primarily the prime minister's loyal deputy.

Last November, that realignment surfaced when bureaucrats helped the government deliver an essentially misleading economic update while mixing public policy and political provocation. Months earlier, Lynch tabled a report blaming largely innocent bureaucrats, instead of guilty Conservatives, for leaking a NAFTA memo that badly embarrassed Barack Obama during the Ohio presidential primary.

Those examples leave hanging a disturbing question: What does it take to hold this prime minister's support? Clerks rarely leave the job with a lot of friends. Yet Lynch's premature exit is badly rattling those who worked closely enough with him to know his defining strengths and weaknesses. Reasonably enough, they question if anyone could satisfy Harper – and Giorno – if not the cerebral, workaholic and yielding Lynch.

Even more troubling is the timing. It's symptomatic of an intolerable situation when someone of Lynch's ability and disposition packs it in just when events are putting a premium on his education and experience. Unlike the Prime Minister, Lynch really is an economist (he has a doctorate) who practised the spooky craft at home and abroad.

Reading the tea leaves over coffee, those charged with operating Ottawa's machinery are reaching unhappy conclusions. If Harper doesn't think he needs Lynch in times this tough then it's foolish to expect him to rely on the civil service for much beyond shovelling billions out Ottawa's back door.

Tomb of the unknown civil servant
Who Kevin Lynch is, why his departure matters, and why it happened.

L. Ian MacDonald believes announcing the retirement of Clerk of the Privy Council Kevin Lynch while the Prime Minister was out of the country, instead of having Stephen Harper announce it himself and express his profuse thanks in public, lent the proceedings “the air of a palace coup, of a power struggle lost by Lynch to [Harper’s chief of staff Guy] Giorno, who … has managed to offend and alienate the entire political class.” This, MacDonald argues in the National Post, is the “worst possible message of continuity to send to the public service,” and what’s more, he says the Harperites are horribly mistaken if they believe Lynch’s successor, Wayne Wouters, “will be any more of a pushover.”

Considering the PMO’s obvious disdain for the civil service, the Post’s John Ivison finds it ironic they’re putting so much trust in Wouters to crack the whip, get stimulus money flowing and salvage the Conservatives’ election hopes. That’s his theory of Lynch’s departure, anyway—well, that and Lynch’s inability to tolerate the environment of “toxic partisanship” that Harper and Giorno have created.

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I lean to the right but I still have a heart and if I have a mission it is to respond to attacks on people not available to protect themselves and to point out the hypocrisy of the left at every opportunity.MY MAJOR GOAL IS HIGHLIGHT THE HYPOCRISY AND STUPIDITY OF THE LEFTISTS ON TORONTO CITY COUNCIL. Last word: In the final analysis this blog is a relief valve for my rants/raves.

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