Roundup: A small shuffle

The practical fallout from Jody Wilson-Raybould’s resignation played out with a minor Cabinet shuffle yesterday morning, but rather than simply picking another backbencher to slot into the veterans affairs portfolio, Justin Trudeau moved Lawrence MacAulay from agriculture to put him in veterans, moved Marie-Claude Bibeau from international development to agriculture, and gave the international development portfolio to Maryam Monsef in addition to her status of women portfolio. There are a couple of calculations here – MacAulay held the veterans file over twenty years ago, so he’s not completely new, and he’s someone who is running again and has held his seat forever, so he looks like a steady hand in the department (and as a bonus, the department headquarters is in Charlottetown, and he’s a PEI MP). Bibeau, meanwhile, gets the distinction of being the country’s first woman agriculture minister, but she herself pointed out that she’s from a rural Quebec riding with a lot of dairy farmers, and she knows their issues well, and that’s a constituency that this government is keen to placate after concessions made in TPP and New NAFTA. And Monsef? She’s got a track record of good work in the portfolio’s she’s held, and can handle the added responsibility, as well as it reinforce the whole “feminist foreign policy” line of the government (not that you’d know it from how they’re funding it, but whatever).

In other SNC-Lavalin/Wilson Raybould Affair news, the opposition parties demanded that Parliament be recalled next week to keep this issue going, but Trudeau refused (and it’s worth remembering that the justice committee will still be meeting over the constituency weeks). Former Conservative and NDP Attorneys General have also written to the RCMP to demand an investigation (no political interference here), while former Liberal ones say there’s no clear criminal case. New Attorney General David Lametti says he wasn’t aware that Wilson-Raybould had already made the decision on the SNC-Lavalin file when he took over the portfolio, and that he’s still getting all of the facts on the situation.

For context, here’s a profile of Wilson-Raybould’s former chief of staff, Jessica Prince. Here’s a look at whether the Ethics Commissioner can really look into the whole matter. Here’s a look at the government’s reconciliation agenda in the lens of Wilson-Raybould’s demotion and resignation, and why her Indigenous world-view may have informed her decision not to go ahead with insisting on a deferred prosecution agreement for SNC-Lavalin. Here’s a look back at the measures the Conservatives put in 13 years ago to separate the role of the Crown Prosecutor from the Department of Justice, creating the Public Prosecution Service, which was one of their measures when they rode in on the white horse of accountability. In light of Michael Wernick’s testimony, here’s a look back reforms Brian Mulroney made to the role of Clerk of the Privy Council, which may create untenable contradictions in his role. Here are five possible scenarios for the future of SNC-Lavalin if the trial goes ahead, which includes decamping for the UK, or a foreign takeover.

And for pundit comment, Chantal Hébert has four questions about the ongoing situation. Andrew Coyne is not convinced it’s time for a prime ministerial resignation or an RCMP investigation, but that a rethink of our governing culture nevertheless is what will ultimately be needed. My weekend column contemplates the damage to Brand Trudeau™ after the SNC-Lavalin/Wilson-Raybould Affair.

Good reads:

  • The fourth quarter GDP data for 2018 was far weaker than expected, in large part due to oil, but also a softer housing market.
  • Justin Trudeau apparently had a call with Donald Trump over steel and aluminium tariffs, but there was little progress.
  • The justice department gave the go-ahead for the Meng Wanzhou extradition process to proceed.
  • The government tabled their bill to give free, expedited pardons for simple pot possession convictions.
  • As the decision to extend the life of our submarines goes ahead, the survival suits aboard need refurbishment. As well, the future of the fleet remains a question.
  • The government’s sustainable development strategy bill finally passed the Senate and received royal assent.
  • NDP MP Nathan Cullen has also announced he won’t run again (but insists there’s no political narrative to see here, no sir).
  • Kevin Carmichael digs into the GDP figures, and where government (and opposition) policy has been failing us following fiscal shocks.
  • Chris Selley marvels at the short-sighted “symbolism” of a vote to ban the procurement of Mexican-built GM vehicles in Toronto.
  • Colby Cosh takes on the lure of a Supreme Court road show (with memories of the Democrabus), and this government’s penchant for “arm’s length” political cover.

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One thought on “Roundup: A small shuffle

  1. Is it not for the Attorney General ALONE to decide what constitutes interference, end of story? How could she ever be deemed wrong in this without, by definition, attacking her independence a 2nd time?

    Given that such interference would be a resigning offence, those pressuring her would be in an untenable conflict of interest in assessing their own actions.

    As H. L. Mencken observed: “It is not possible to make a man understand what receiving his paycheck requires him not to.”

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