Prime minister Mark Carney released his “mandate letter,” singular, yesterday following the “Cabinet planning forum,” which is how he’s re-branded a retreat—because nothing says Canada’s New Government™ like renaming everything. And the thing is, it’s not much of a mandate letter at all, but rather a press release that lists seven priorities that essentially tasks ministers to figure out how their files fit into these priorities and do them, which are sufficiently broad that makes it hard to actually hold anyone to account, which was supposed to be the whole reason why Justin Trudeau made the mandate letters public in the first place (though his too were full of repetitive boilerplate language and values statements, but they did at least have some specific items for each minister).
Note: Apologies for this being late/incomplete, but I’ve been really sick the last couple of days, but I at least wanted to put something out before all of the links went stale.
In case you missed it:
- My National Magazine profile of new justice minister Sean Fraser.
- My weekend column that points to the big decisions that Mark Carney is going to have to make about the Senate.
- My column demonstrates why we’re not really headed toward a two-party system in Canada, because it’s largely based on a false premise.
- My Loonie Politics Quick Take on Carney’s creeping presidentialism with those “decision notes” he’s been signing for the cameras.
Ukraine Dispatch
https://twitter.com/ukraine_world/status/1925153620225310721