Priceless advice for ex-politicians

From: POLITICO Ottawa Playbook - Wednesday Mar 09,2022 11:00 am
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Ottawa Playbook

By Zi-Ann Lum and Nick Taylor-Vaisey

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WELCOME TO OTTAWA PLAYBOOK. I’m your host, Zi-Ann Lum with Nick Taylor-Vaisey. The Conservative leadership race is shaping up to be one of the more interesting ones in A Very Long Time as official entrants make it a competition. JOHN MANLEY shares advice he wasn’t able to give JEAN CHAREST. Also, Alberta Energy Minister SONYA SAVAGE calls us from a Houston conference where energy security is resetting policymaking, maybe.

For your radar

T MINUS 1 — We're tuning into trivia, dropping out of the news cycle (briefly) Thursday for another edition of Playbook Virtual Trivia. Bring snacks. We hope you’ll join us.

DRIVING THE DAY

SHE’S INPIERRE POILIEVRE has an official CPC leadership challenger: LESLYN LEWIS.

The Ontario MP is taking another shot at the party’s top job, angling to build on the momentum she created during her 2019 leadership campaign, where she finished third. She declared her candidacy with a video, capped with her chosen slogan: “Hope. Unity. Compassion.”

Leslyn Lewis is pictured.

Haldimand–Norfolk MP Leslyn Lewis speaks in the House of Commons on March 4, 2022. | ParlVu

Lewis’ announcement landed ahead of JEAN CHAREST’s anticipated formal campaign launch at a Calgary brewery Thursday. His three-word slogan: “Built to win.”

The former Quebec Liberal premier has faced an early onslaught of turncoat criticism from supporters of Poilievre, who was the only declared candidate in the race until Tuesday. Poilievre officially launched his campaign, with his “For prime minister” slogan, just over a month ago.

Conservatives choose their new leader in 26 weeks and 3 days. There’s a bit of a spring sprint for prospective candidates. The deadline to officially enter the race is April 19.

ADVICE, UNDISPENSED — Campaign preparation forced Charest to bail last-minute on a planned panel appearance Tuesday at the Canadian Global Affairs Institute’s annual state of trade conference. Panellist JOHN MANLEY shared some advice he received when he retired from federal politics in 2004 — and chuckled about it not getting to Charest in time.

“I wasn’t given the opportunity to give him the advice that was given to me after I left government, which was: Lie on your back, breathe slowly anytime the urge comes to go back in. And in due time, it’ll pass,” the former deputy prime minister said. “Good for Jean.”

DISPATCH FROM TEXAS — Alberta Premier JASON KENNEY and the province’s Energy Minister SONYA SAVAGE were on the ground in Houston when President JOE BIDEN announced a U.S. ban on Russian oil imports.

“It's very frustrating down here when we see the U.S. administration reaching out to Venezuela, talks with Iran, discussions and thoughts about the U.S. president going over to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia when we're right next door,” Savage told Playbook during a call in between meetings at Tuesday's CERAWEEK energy conference.

Energy security, climate change, electricity, affordability and reliability are themes Savage said she’s hearing on the ground.

Biden’s ban means the roughly 200,000 barrels of oil and 500,000 barrels of petroleum products imported from Russia daily will have to come from elsewhere. Canada has rarely been mentioned by U.S. officials as a first-choice market to increase oil and gas imports. (Provinces and territories have jurisdiction over energy production so any conversations would have to be with the provinces.)

— $130 barrel incentive : A senior Biden administration official told reporters Tuesday the import ban is an opportunity for Wall Street and oil and gas companies to “step up.”

More from POLITICO: Boom time for oil producers as high prices pad profits, but gasoline spike brings warnings.

— Pride and politics : Savage said for the U.S. to come to their northern neighbor, to Alberta specifically, to ask for an increase in barrels is akin to admitting they were wrong.

There’s some political exposure to consider, Savage said, the U.S. government would have to account for Biden's cancellation of Keystone XL. The pipeline would have carried 830,000 barrels of oil per day from Alberta to Gulf Coast refineries.

— Energy security enters the chat: Countries facing critical energy crunches related to Russian President VLADIMIR PUTIN’s war in Ukraine are unlikely to get immediate relief from Canadian energy supplies. Western Canada has four major crude oil export pipelines and no export facility for liquified natural gas that’s currently operational.

“We have to be able to get both the federal government, Canada and the United States, out of the way so that infrastructure — cross border infrastructure — can be built,” Savage said.

“That's the biggest challenge.”

THE FIFTH MUSKETEER — The backdrop was Latvia’s Ādaži Military Base. Soldiers milled around parked military vehicles in the background while snow fell on four lecterns set up outside for Latvian PM KRISJANIS KARINS, NATO Secretary General JENS STOLTENBERG, Spanish PM PEDRO SÁNCHEZ, PM JUSTIN TRUDEAU — and National Defense Minister ANITA ANAND.

Trudeau and Anand announced an early extension to Operation REASSURANCE, Canada’s contribution to NATO military mission in central and eastern Europe, which was set to expire next year.

A senior Canadian official told POLITICO’s ANDY BLATCHFORD after the event that the exact duration of the extension will be announced at a later date. The government, the official said, wanted to move quickly because the extension was the top request of Canada from both Latvia and NATO.

Trudeau spurred an appetite for more details after being asked if he would be willing to go to war. His answer was as close to a “yes” without saying the word explicitly.

“I know I can speak for all NATO members when I say we will all abide by Article Five,” he said, referencing the Washington Treaty’s principle of collective defence.

WEF ICES RUSSIAN LINKS — At least six Davos regulars are now subject to personal or organizational sanctions from Western governments, POLITICO’s RYAN HEATH reports.

They include HERMAN GREF — chief executive officer of Sberbank, which has been sanctioned by the U.S., U.K. and Canada. Greg is no longer listed as a member of the World Economic Forum’s board of trustees.

Deputy PM CHRYSTIA FREELAND , who sits on WEF’s board, helped lead the push to eject Russian banks from SWIFT. A spokesperson for Freeland told POLITICO: "Canada will continue to work in lockstep with our partners to sanction President Putin and his hangers-on for their unprovoked and barbaric invasion of Ukraine," adding "we encourage international organizations to do everything they can to support these efforts."

Read more from Ryan: Davos freezes out Putin and Russian oligarchs.

AROUND THE HILL

DEFENSE DISRUPTION — The CDA Institute’s three-day Ottawa Conference kicks off today with a hybrid mix of virtual and in-person events at the Château Laurier. Wednesday is all virtual with a headlining keynote from NATO Secretary General JENS STOLTENBERG.

There’s, ahem, a lot to talk about.

— On the speakers schedule: Defense Minister ANITA ANAND, Chief of the Defense Staff Gen. WAYNE EYRE, PM’s National Security and Intelligence Advisor JODY THOMAS, foreign affairs DM MARTA MORGAN, CSE Chief SHELLEY BRUCE, special UN rep for Afghanistan DEBORAH LYONS, ex-ambo of Afghanistan to Canada JAWED LUDIN, Wilson Center's Canada Institute’s CHRISTOPHER SANDS, former Obama appointee LINDSAY RODMAN, Japanese Gen. YAMAZAKI KOJI, U.K. vice-chief of the defense staff Adm. Sir TIM FRASER, Belarus opposition leader SVIATLANA TSIKHANOUSKAYA and Canada’s first Ambassador for Women, Peace and Security JACQUELINE O’NEILL.

FOOD SUPPLY CONCERNS MARIE-CLAUDE BIBEAU confirmed to Playbook that she’ll take part in an emergency meeting of G-7 agriculture ministers Friday.

Ukrainian Agriculture Minister ROMAN LESHCHENKO has been invited to join the meeting called to address the impact of the war in Ukraine on international food supplies — and where and how rich countries can help stabilize global markets.

“This coordination demonstrates the broad international support for Ukraine and its people,” Bibeau told Playbook in a statement. The Canadian agriculture and agri-food Canada minister promised “a strong, coordinated response” and pledged to “work with the sector to limit the impacts on farmers.”

JUST IN TIME FOR JUNE’S ELECTION — Ontario Premier DOUG FORD told reporters that his government is “very close” to landing a $10/day childcare deal with Ottawa.

ASK US ANYTHING

What are you hearing that you need Playbook to know? Any questions about Parliament? Send it all our way.  

TODAY'S HIGHLIGHTS

Prime Minister JUSTIN TRUDEAU is in Berlin, Germany and will visit the Platform 17 Memorial before a bilateral meeting with German Chancellor OLAF SCHOLZ. Trudeau and Scholz will hold a news conference at 8:15 a.m. EST.

Deputy Prime Minister CHRYSTIA FREELAND is in Berlin with the PM where she will join Trudeau’s bilat and news conference with SCHOLZ. At 4 p.m. local time, she will visit the Brandenburg Gate with Atlantik-Brücke Chairman SIGMAR GABRIEL and Munich Security Conference Chairman CHRISTOPH HUESGEN.

9 a.m. Environment Minister STEVEN GUILBEAULT, Public Services and Procurement Minister FILOMENA TASSI, Ontario Environment Minister DAVID PICCINI, Hamilton Mayor FRED EISENBERGER and Burlington Mayor MARIANNE MEED WARD are in the Hammer to make an announcement about Randle Reef.

10:55 a.m. NATO Secretary General JENS STOLTENBERG delivers a virtual address at the CDA Institute’s Ottawa Conference.

12:00 p.m. Public Safety Minister MARCO MENDICINO is in Agassiz, B.C. to make a funding announcement in support of an Indigenous youth program and will hold a media availability.

PAPER TRAIL

FROM THE TENDERS — The Chantier Davie shipyard is bringing the 53-year-old CCGS St-Laurent, Canada's oldest icebreaker, into its drydocks for work that adds up to a cool C$16.5 million (and counting). … The Mounties paid C$622,922 for accommodations and meeting rooms at the Delta Hotel in downtown Vancouver, where the cheapest room costs C$244 a night.

MEDIA ROOM

— From CRAIG SILVERMAN and JEFF KAO in ProPublica: Fake fact-checks are the new disinformation.

MELANIE PARADIS , a former director of strategic comms to ERIN O'TOOLE, wrote at The Line about the need for Tories to reject conspiracy theories: "Conservatives need to be part of the solution. Thus far, we're part of the problem."

— Ukrainian President VOLODYMYR ZELENSKYY has outwitted Russia in the war on information, writes CHARLIE WARZEL in The Atlantic, but that fight is far from over.

— The Atlantic’s ED YONG on the missing social reckoning over America’s nearly 1 million who have died from Covid-19: How did this many deaths become normal?

PROZONE

If you’re a POLITICO Pro , don’t miss our latest policy newsletter:Trudeau: Canada’s military plans to stick around eastern Europe.

In other headlines for Pros:

Infographic: How Russia is woven into global oil and gas exports.
EU diplomats green-light further sanctions against Russia.
‘The price the world has to pay’: Ukraine’s gas giant CEO says Ukraine needs more than Russian oil sanctions.
EU to phase out dependency on Russian fossil fuels.
How the tricky politics of a Russian oil ban roiled Washington in 100 hours

Playbookers

Birthdays: HBD+1 to Bluesky Strategies senior associate HUSSAIN SHORISH. HBD+4 to StrategyCorp senior VP GARRY KELLER. Do you have a birthday coming up? Does a colleague? Send us the dates and we'll tell the world.

Spotted: Environment Minister STEVEN GUILBEAULT riding VIA Rail, again … Former GG MICHAËLLE JEAN, accepting a key to the city from Ottawa Mayor JIM WATSON.

Movers and shakers: The Business Council of Canada logged a meeting with Minister-of-Many-Things MARY NG and her policy director, JILLIAN WHITE . The wide-ranging conversation covered health, immigration, industry, infrastructure, international relations, international trade, science and technology, budget, economic development, employment and training.

Nieuport Aviation Infrastructure Partners, the owners of Toronto's Billy Bishop Airport, recently lobbied three ministers: OMAR ALGHABRA (transport), HELENA JACZEK (economic development) and RANDY BOISSONNAULT (tourism). The company also met with Liberal MP NATHANIEL ERSKINE-SMITH. One of their priorities? A new U.S. pre-clearance facility.

Farewells:BRUCE CARSON, a Tory staffer and adviser for parts of five decades, died on March 5. Carson served former PM JOE CLARK in the 70s, and later worked in STEPHEN HARPER's PMO. "He was a controversial figure with a giant wealth of policy & political acumen," tweeted LISA RAITT. "He was also funny, charming & loyal. I greatly benefitted from his advice & will miss being able to call him. Condolences to his family."

HOUSE BUSINESS

12:30 p.m.The House of Commons national defense committee meets to discuss NATO, Ukraine and to continue its study of “threat analysis affecting Canada” and military readiness.

3:30 p.m. The House of Commons natural resources committee’s subcommittee on agenda and procedure meets in-camera.

TRIVIA

Tuesday’s answer: March 8 marked the 100th anniversary of AGNES MACPHAIL, the first woman elected to the House of Commons, taking her seat in the chamber.

Props to a lot of readers who know their history: BOB GORDON, BARBARA GRANTHAM, MICHELLE JOHNSTON, STACEY NORONHA, ALAN KAN, MICHAEL MACDONALD, KEVIN BOSCH, TOM CORMIER, GORDON RANDALL, CULLY ROBINSON, JOHN GUOBA, JOHN ECKER, ROBERT MCDOUGALL, SAM MACPHAIL ("no relation!"), MICHAEL SUNG, LAURIE MACE, KATHLEEN HUNT, SHEILA GERVAIS, RODDY MCFALL, DOROTHY MCCABE, JANE DOULL, JOANNA PLATER, ANNE-MARIE STACEY, AMY BOUGHNER, GORD MCINTOSH, GERRY THORNE, PAM HRICK and GANGA WIGNARAJAH.

LAURA JARVIS reminded Playbook that MacPhail later represented a provincial riding in Leaside, a former town amalgamated into East York, which was itself amalgamated into Toronto. Fun fact: MacPhail's residence — seen here — is a five-minute drive from the childhood home of another famous Leasider, STEPHEN HARPER.

Wednesday’s question: Who was the first Chinese-Canadian elected to the House of Commons?

Send your answers to ottawaplaybook@politico.com

 

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