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2012 Cabinet Shuffle

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GAP

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It's gonna be a long, hot summer.....more for some than others.....

Time to shuffle the deck, but Harper’s short on aces
Jeffrey Simpson The Globe and Mail  Wednesday, Jul. 04 2012
Article Link

We are more than a year removed from the last federal election. The Harper Conservatives have done hard, controversial things with their majority. Predictably, they have suffered politically, if polls can be believed.

Polls, of course, are the most overworked, over-analyzed, and overrated part of politics, especially with so much time remaining before the next election. So let’s just say that the government has lost support since the last election, and leave it at that.

After a year, a Prime Minister develops a feel for his cabinet, and for backbenchers elected in 2011. To say that the Conservative backbench is weak would be an understatement. So if, as is likely this summer, the Prime Minister shuffles his cabinet, it’s not like his hand will be full of high cards.

In Quebec, for example, where the Conservatives are in hopeless shape, the Prime Minister has only a handful of MPs anyway. So if he wants to do something, he might have to promote Maxime Bernier, who was a bust at foreign affairs as a minister, got embroiled in a contretemps leaving sensitive documents at his then-girlfriend’s place, and departed cabinet.

Mr. Bernier is a true conservative believer, though. He’s a Fraser Institute kind of guy, who thinks the market offers the best solution to just about every problem except herpes. He is therefore in tune with the government, if not his native province. But he is popular in the Beauce, his region of Quebec and, faute de mieux, should probably be given a more important job than his miserable little ministry of state.

Then there’s Vic Toews, the hard-line Justice Minister, spokesperson for much of the government’s “tough on crime” legislation. It’s been widely mooted in Manitoba legal circles that Mr. Toews would welcome a judicial appointment, although not all Manitoba judges would welcome him.

Nonetheless, the raw politics of the future of the Conservative Party in Manitoba suggest the party cannot continue to be centred around Mr. Toews, who has been in politics a very long time. Therefore, the Prime Minister might look to Shelly Glover, who spent almost two decades with the Winnipeg Police Service before entering politics (and speaks some French), or Candice Hoeppner from Portage, who was the party’s darling when she led the incessant and ultimately successful campaign against the long-gun registry.

Elections are won or lost in Ontario, more than anywhere else. Mr. Harper has at least three backbench Ontario MPs ready for promotion, former ambassador Chris Alexander, who would seem a likely replacement at CIDA for Bev Oda who resigned Tuesday; Kellie Leitch, the pediatric orthopedic surgeon with more university degrees than anyone in caucus and a long Conservative pedigree; and Michael Chong who did something so unusual that he has never recovered – he resigned from cabinet on principle.

Mr. Chong did not agree with designating francophone Quebeckers as a “nation” within Canada, and so left cabinet. This lèse-majesté may still be a crippler. Moreover, Mr. Chong actually speaks his mind – on the need for parliamentary reform and new ways of selecting party leaders.

More heretical still for the Harperites, Mr. Chong actually believes deeply in climate change and wants a whole lot more done about the problem. For all these reasons, Mr. Chong theoretically should be on a fast track back to cabinet, but for all these reasons he might remain where he is.

Mr. Alexander and Ms. Leitch have mastered the apparently necessary art of publicly spinning the government line, but neither displays the humourless, attack-dog partisanship favoured as a political style by senior ministers.

The problem – a lack of attack-dog instincts – works against James Rajotte from Edmonton, arguably the most popular Conservative not in cabinet. That he is universally liked and respected as chair of the finance committee does him no good. Worse, he’s from Alberta in a cabinet already stuffed with Albertans.

It’s not hard to finger a bunch of Conservative ministers who should move on, or move back. This Prime Minister, like some of his predecessors, has been a bit of a softie in demoting underperformers. Not for him – as yet – a former British prime minister’s admonition that all good prime ministers must at some point be butchers.
end
 
The Globe and Mail says "Harper makes slight cabinet shuffle:"

1. Julian Fantino to CIDA vice Bev Oda

2. Bernard Valcourt to Asociate Minister of National Defence vice Fantino.  (Valcourt continues as Minister of State (Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency) (La Francophonie).)

bernard-valcourt.jpg

Bernard Valcourt
 
Valcourt's bio, from his web site:

Biography

The Honorable Bernard Valcourt is a barrister and solicitor practicing law at the City of Edmundston, New Brunswick.  He has served as Member of Parliament for the electoral district of Madawaska-Victoria from 1984 to 1993.  Shortly after his election to the House of Commons in 1984, Mr. Valcourt has served as Parliamentary secretary to the Minister of State (Science and Technology) and the Minister of National Revenue.  On June 30th, 1986, Mr. Valcourt was summoned to the Queen's Privy Council for Canada and until 1993 he successively served in the Twenty-Fourth and the Twenty-Fifth Ministry as Minister of Sate (Small Businesses and Tourism), Minister of State (Indian Affairs and Northern Development), Minister of Consumer and Corporate Affairs, Minister of Fisheries and Oceans, Minister of Employment and Immigration and Minister of Labor.  In 1995 Mr. Valcourt was elected to the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick as the member for Edmundston where he served as Leader of the Opposition until 1997 and member until 1999.
 
From the PM's Info-machine:
Prime Minister Stephen Harper today announced the following changes to the Ministry at a swearing-in ceremony at Rideau Hall:

The Honourable Julian Fantino, as Minister of International Cooperation, will keep advancing efforts to make Canadian aid effective and accountable.

The Honourable Bernard Valcourt, as Associate Minister of National Defence, will ensure the Canadian Armed Forces have the equipment needed to be successful in their missions. Minister Valcourt will continue his work as Minister of State (Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency) (La Francophonie).

“These changes to the Ministry ensure continuity as we focus on creating jobs, growth and long-term prosperity,” said the Prime Minister. “Mr. Fantino and Mr. Valcourt bring strong leadership experience to these important positions.”
 
The CBC is now reporting that, according to a source in the PMO, that's it for summer 2012: Peter MacKay stays as MND.
 
This article, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail, is, in my opinion, a fair and I think accurate assessment of why the cabinet shuffle was so minor:

My emphasis added

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/minimalist-shuffle-shows-harper-has-his-team-in-place/article4391301/
Minimalist shuffle shows Harper has his team in place

JOHN IBBITSON

The Globe and Mail
Published Thursday, Jul. 05 2012

Apart from his utter contempt for the purported wisdom of armchair political strategists, there is another good reason why Stephen Harper’s cabinet shuffle was more minimalist than music by Steve Reich.

On all the major files – the key priorities for this government through the fall and next spring – the Prime Minister’s team is in place and doing its job. One can applaud or abhor the direction of the Harper government, but the cabinet is generally performing as a cabinet should – especially in a world where so much power is tightly held by the Prime Minister himself.

The first and foremost priority is to stay on track toward a balanced budget, which is the finance minister’s job. No one doubts Jim Flaherty’s ability to handle that task. Mr. Flaherty is on his way to becoming Canada’s longest serving finance minister.

The government’s other great priority, the one by which it will judge itself and be judged, is expanding trade. Even before Wednesday’s announcement, there was widespread expectation within the government and the public service that on this front stability would trump change.

International Trade Minister Ed Fast has worked hard and effectively to shepherd the European Union trade negotiations and to pave the way for Canada’s entry into the Trans Pacific Partnership talks. The fact that Nigel Wright, Mr. Harper’s chief of staff, came in to close the deal with the Americans on TPP was no reflection on Mr. Fast; negotiations of such crucial importance were bound to eventually become a White House-Langevin Bloc affair.

John Baird is a highly regarded foreign affairs minister. (Several senior diplomats report that, for the first time with this government, they feel they are talking to a foreign minister who has the ear of the Prime Minister.) Joe Oliver, if a bit over-the-top at times, is a passionate advocate of new pipelines, and Peter Kent has been a good and faithful servant at Environment.

It was never likely that Mr. Harper would shake up a team that was doing exactly what he wants them to do: pulling out all stops to expand trade, especially resource exports to Asia.

Citizenship and Immigration Minister Jason Kenney is second only to Mr. Flaherty in importance within the government, having transformed immigration policy and delivered millions of immigrant votes to the Conservatives. Mr. Harper wouldn’t move him unless Mr. Kenney demanded to be moved.

Defence procurement is a thorny issue. Much has been written about Defence Minister Peter MacKay’s prospects, but the biggest and most controversial contract, the F-35 fighter acquisition, has been shunted to Public Works, where Rona Ambrose is said to enjoy the Prime Minister’s confidence. Nothing else that’s happening at Defence is now considered a first-tier priority.

Most other portfolios are also second-tier. With the Tories’ crime agenda largely in place, there was no urgent need to shuffle Justice Minister Rob Nicholson – who was, in any case, doing a capable job – or Public Safety Minister Vic Toews – despite his mishandling of the Internet access legislation.

Ministers such as Gerry Ritz at Agriculture (any decision on the future of supply management is years away), Leona Aglukkaq at Health (the funding formula is in place), Tony Clement at Treasury Board (the cuts to the public service are moving along) will not be the face of this government over the coming months. There was no need to disrupt their departments by shuffling just for the sake of shuffling.

Your correspondent did mistakenly think one minister was vulnerable who turned out not to be. The government plans to launch major reforms aimed at improving First Nation education on reserves. Buy-in from at least some aboriginal leaders on the pipeline proposals would be a huge publicity coup for the government. Issues surrounding Arctic sovereignty will increase in urgency as polar nations assert their claims.

Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Minister John Duncan has been in uncertain health. Not everyone was confident he would survive the shuffle. But Mr. Harper is said to have great respect for Mr. Duncan, who in any case holds down one of only two Tory seats on Vancouver Island, a vital and difficult battleground for Conservatives. He stays.

As do they all, now that Ms. Oda is no more. There are many on the opposition benches and in the media who don’t think much of Stephen Harper’s cabinet. He, however, appears to like it just fine.


I think, barring some unforeseen crisis (aren't all real crises unforeseen?), "second tier" is the (politically) correct description of national defence for the next few (five to ten) years.
 
But if Defence Minister Peter MacKay is able to pull off the F-35 acquisition via Public Works he ends up the good guy.....barring any more helicopter trips....
 
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