And so on to infinity

From: POLITICO Ottawa Playbook - Wednesday Mar 15,2023 10:01 am
A daily look inside Canadian politics and power.
Mar 15, 2023 View in browser
 
Ottawa Playbook

By Zi-Ann Lum

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Thanks for reading Ottawa Playbook. I’m your host, Zi-Ann Lum, with Nick Taylor-Vaisey. It’s March 15 except in the time machine that is PROC where debate about KATIE TELFORD has kept the committee calendar on March 7. MPs debated late into the evening after spending another day talking in circles.

DRIVING THE DAY


COMMITTEE TALKATHON Tune into ParlVU for evidence of a national security concern that has devolved into an insufferable partisan mud fight.

Political games were on display Tuesday as Liberal MPs chewed through committee resources, again, to prevent a vote on a Conservative motion that seeks KATIE TELFORD, the prime minister’s longtime chief of staff, as a witness.

“We could just call the question,” said Tory MP MICHAEL BARRETT, “Or we can listen for another two and a half hours to more filibustering.”

— Spoiler alert: Liberals chose more filibustering. More than 23 hours of it. Lucky translators.

Telford has proven herself capable under pressure. Think about her performance during the Public Order Emergency Commission, or in rare committee cameos, like during the WE Charity scandal, or when she took questions on the government’s handling of sexual misconduct allegations against JONATHAN VANCE.

The Liberals are sticking to the principle that political staff don’t appear before committee — that’s the minister’s job. They accuse the Conservatives of playing political games in trying to get Telford to PROC.

Bloc MP CHRISTINE NORMADIN told the committee that from her seat, “the opposite is true.” The Quebec lawmaker said while the Conservatives’ tactics may be “abrasive,” they ultimately support a public inquiry, despite allegations some of their candidates could have foreign interference links.

— Running the PROC clock: The longer the Liberals’ talk tape runs, the greater the odds the public will perceive the committee’s work to be a waste of time.

One eyebrow-raising remark came from Liberal MP ANITA VANDENBELD, after she expressed concern that lives could be ruined by accusations about being foreign agents. “Once you say that about someone … how do you prove that you're not?” she said.

Her next comment framed whiteness as innocence. “I am fortunate, I can go back to my constituency and tell people, first of all, I'm white. I'm of Dutch descent. I am sanctioned by China myself,” she said. “I can say, obviously, I'm not working for China … But what if I was Chinese? What if my parents were Chinese?”

— Fact check: Every politician and every Canadian is vulnerable to foreign interference, not just the Chinese-looking ones. It’s a complex issue. Ask the delegation of parliamentarians who accepted an invitation from the National People’s Congress to travel to China in 2019.

But advocacy groups, such as Alliance Canada Hong Kong, have been consistent in their warnings for years against treating the diaspora community as a monolith, calling the reflex “reductive and harmful.”

International Trade Minister MARY NG broached the double-standard last week when she said Chinese Canadian MPs have to deal with “suspicious eyes that now cast question on why we are involved, as if we are easily controlled or influenced by hostile actors from afar.”

— What’s missing: Discussion about how Beijing has taken advantage of an era of globalization to extend its influence beyond its borders and what political interference has to do with it. Toronto Association for Democracy in China co-chair CHEUK KWAN told the House ethics committee Friday that election meddling by Beijing is the tip of an iceberg, a small piece of an invisible interference campaign that’s been “soft, intangible and gradual.”

Last year’s record exports and imports with China show how entangled Canada’s economy is with an authoritarian superpower.

— What’s next: Prime Minister JUSTIN TRUDEAU hasn’t ruled out an inquiry. Instead, the government has asked the public to trust the process, which is doing The Ottawa Thing of hiring an external consultant, a.k.a. special rapporteur, to advise on next steps.

Naming a special rapporteur is a “baby step,” NDP MP RACHEL BLANEY told PROC, asking her colleagues to move on to a vote, which did not happen by the time the committee was suspended at 10:09 p.m., ending a nearly 12-hour meeting.

— Tick tock: Trudeau told reporters inside a Michelin tires plant yesterday in Nova Scotia that his government is working to appoint that rapporteur in the “coming days or week.” (Yes, singular.)

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For your radar


Newly installed Trade Secretary Kemi Badenoch leaves Downing Street.

Newly installed Trade Secretary Kemi Badenoch leaves Downing Street, London, after meeting new Prime Minister Liz Truss, Sept. 6, 2022. | Kirsty O'Connor/AP Photo


TRADE BEEF — Ng and Britain’s trade chief KEMI BADENOCH settled differences Tuesday in a move that bodes well for the U.K.'s post-Brexit hopes of joining a key Indo-Pacific trade bloc.

A senior Canadian official told POLITICO’s GRAHAM LANKTREE that Ng and Badenoch “tackled some of the remaining issues” and are “now wrapping up final negotiations” on market access. This, they said, “breaks [an] impasse with the U.K. on CPTPP negotiations.”

CPTPP is, of course, the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership.

The development follows Canada's demand that Britain open its beef market during CPTPP talks on the Vietnamese island of Phu Quoc earlier this month, four people familiar with the talks confirmed to POLITICO. The demand had reportedly thwarted hopes of a breakthrough at the time.

TODAY'S HIGHLIGHTS


— Prime Minister JUSTIN TRUDEAU is on The Rock. The PM is in Bonavista-Burin-Trinity, Newfoundland and Labrador to start the day with an 10 a.m. (11 a.m. NDT) meet-and-greet with parents to talk about child care with the province’s premier ANDREW FUREY.

— Deputy Prime Minister CHRYSTIA FREELAND is in Toronto, preoccupied with “private meetings.”

8 a.m. Foreign Affairs MÉLANIE JOLY has an early photo-op with Greece’s Foreign Minister NIKOS DENDIAS in Ottawa before the pair head to Montreal to visit the city’s Greek community.

10:15 a.m. (11:15 a.m. NDT) Trudeau, Furey hold a joint media availability after making a child care announcement.

1 p.m. (2 p.m. NDT) Trudeau has a town hall hosted by the Clarenville Chamber of Commerce in his schedule.

1 p.m. (11 a.m. CST) Natural Resources Minister JONATHAN WILKINSON is in Saskatchewan to make a money announcement at the Saskatoon Chamber of Commerce.

MEDIA ROOM


PAUL WELLS caught up with outgoing MP MARC GARNEAU in Montreal, who brought up “occasional sharp distinctions between his attitude and the Trudeau government’s.”

— Natural Resources Minister JONATHAN WILKINSON is on the ARC Energy pod where he takes questions on the 2023 federal budget, the regional roundtables and the Inflation Reduction Act.

— ChatGPT seems to have passed over Canadian politics with barely a blip, JORDAN LEICHNITZ writes for Air Quotes Media. “What could it mean for our democracy?”

— Liberal MP WAYNE LONG tells the Telegraph-Journal’s ADAM HURAS he won’t reoffer in the next election.

— Bloomberg’s NATASHA WHITE and ARCHIE HUNTER report on the “wake-up call” spurred by ING’s decision to cut financing of oil and gas trading.

PROZONE


Read our latest policy newsletter for POLITICO Pro s: Why it’s still March 7 at PROC.

In other news for POLITICO Pro s:

Oil and gas costs expected to rise 10% this year — report.

House Republicans could expand their majority if they win these court cases.

Bank's implosion puts climate tech companies on edge.

Winter power grid troubles put scrutiny on natural gas reliability.

European Parliament approves 3 climate bills.

Playbookers


Birthdays: HBD to former Conservative Cabinet minister RONA AMBROSE, Newfoundland and Labrador MP YVONNE JONES, former Conservative MP PHIL MCCOLEMAN and former B.C. politician DAVID J. MITCHELL.

Spotted: Tory MP ALEX RUFF’s branded fishing lure … Sen. PETER BOEHM showing off his beach view in Mexico.

Bloc Québécois Leader YVES-FRANÇOIS BLANCHET and MP KRISTINA MICHAUD paying respects to victims of a deadly crash in Amqui, Quebec.

Send Playbookers tips to ottawaplaybook@politico.com.

Movers and shakers: Canada has a new ambassador to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations: VICTORIA SINGMIN replacing DIEDRAH KELLY in the role … “Part-time city councillor” KEVIN TOWNSEND has joined Sussex Strategy as a senior associate … Former SEAMUS O’REGAN staffer DAKOTA BURGIN is joining Evolve PR.

Former Liberal MP SCOTT SIMMS has a new job as the new president of the Pearson Centre for Progressive Policy.

Longtime cement lobbyist MICHAEL MCSWEENEY on Tuesday filed his 32nd meetup with a public office holder since the 2022 fiscal update on behalf of Lehigh Hanson Canada.

McSweeney has met with ministers, PMO officials and other senior political staffers, deputy ministers, as well as senior bureaucrats on tax policy. Lehigh Hanson wants to build a carbon capture and storage project in Edmonton — and is hoping for a favorable tax credit and help from the Strategic Innovation Fund.

— 2Traverse Strategy Group senior consultant JEFF SILVERSTEIN is arranging meetings with opposition politicians for telecom Iristel. Iristel hopes to "set out its case against the Canada Revenue Agency," which the company sued in 2022 over withheld GST and HST refunds.

Farewells: Conservative MP ERIN O’TOOLE pays tribute to Second World War veteran ART BOON, “one of Canada’s great citizens.”

On the Hill


Parliament returns March 20.

Find upcoming House committees here

Keep track of Senate committees here

TRIVIA


Tuesday’s answer: The newly retired CHRIS HALL covered eight prime ministers over his career.

Props to LAURA JARVIS, JOHN DILLON, BOB RICHARDSON and LESLIE SWARTMAN.

Playbook Order of Merit to YAROSLAV BARON, who points out the answer is technically nine if you include the time Hall spent running the Queen’s Journal.

Wednesday’s question: How many of the Famous 5 became senators?

Think you have a harder trivia question? Send us your best.

Want to grab the attention of movers and shakers on Parliament Hill? Want your brand in front of a key audience of Ottawa influencers? Playbook can help. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how: jshapiro@politico.com.

Playbook wouldn’t happen: Without Luiza Ch. Savage and Sue Allan.

 

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