The Library of Parliament who are
responsible for filling the position when Mr Page's contract expires
in just two months has only now “issued
a Request for Proposals (RFP) seeking the services of an executive
search firm to assist with the recruitment
and selection of candidates for the PBO position.” they then
propose to “ issue a contract to a supplier who will then
prepare the recruitment strategy and detailed work plan, including a
list of activities and timeline.”. Given the speed with which
government typically moves on such issues it is clear that this
position will remain vacant for some time whilst they form “a
committee whose mandate is to provide the names of three candidates
for the position of PBO to the Leader of the Government”, said
committee to “include former senior officials who worked in
federal public administrations, such as former Auditors General, past
PCO Clerks, former heads of other central agencies and possibly
former parliamentarians who are knowledgeable in this area of
expertise.”
Opposition
leaders and others have already expressed
concern over such process not having been started some time ago and
whether the selected candidate when eventually appointed will in fact
be both qualified and continue to be an independent and non partisan
individual able to stand up to government pressure to be less
forthcoming in his (or her) reports. Some have even speculated that
the position and the under staffed and underfunded department may be
eliminated. Given the Harper regimes modus oprandi of hiding as much
of their financial shell game as possible from both parliament and
the public I would say that is a very real possibility, but more
probable is the appointment of a right wing friendly less forceful
individual.
Whatever happens Mr Page and his team,
who hopefully remain able to continue their work without restriction,
will be hard to replace. It takes a
very special individual to stand up to the
Prime Minister of Canada and his minions when they seek to restrict
access to documents and data that are essential in order to fully
inform or members of parliament of the financial implications of
government proposals and past actions. Mr Page is clearly such a man
and, as I have said before deserves
far more recognition than he can expect to
receive whilst this regime is in power.
“I was told by different people, you are not going back to the Department of Finance, there won’t be a public sector job,” he said recently in an interview about his coming end of term.
Given that as things stand now the PBO
is not
an independent body but operates under the
Library of Parliament at
the whim of the PMO it can be seen that this
office could well degenerate into yet another toothless plutocracy,
it is as Mr Page himself says the office needs to be redefined in
law for its own protection. It’s untenable that a watchdog serve at
the pleasure of the person being watched, he argues.
Opposition parties, perhaps eyeing the day they might gain
power and be saddled with a nettlesome PBO, initially raised few
objections to the way the PBO was established.Mr. Page says the office and its way of operations are well established. Now Canadians and MPs need to ask themselves a question.
“The big issue becomes: Does
Parliament at large want this office? Do Canadians want this office?”
The resounding answer to that is YES,
but there is a real concern that we will not continue to receive the
clear and unbiased reporting that Mr Page and his team have provided
over the last several years. Given that now the Speaker and others
are opposing Mr Pages efforts to have the courts on his efforts to
get sufficient information to provide a realistic report upon the
budget that seem highly probable.
Lawyers for the two speakers and the Attorney General of Canada are expected to argue in court in March that it’s up to Parliament — not the federal court — to determine the mandate of the parliamentary budget officer.
The attorney general, in court earlier this month, failed in its bid to have the PBO’s case dismissed. Arguments for the case will be heard in Ottawa on March 21 and 22.
The PBO has asked the Federal Court to clarify its mandate and whether it has the jurisdiction to access details — as requested by NDP Leader Tom Mulcair — of the $5.2 billion in budget reductions over the next few years, including the impacts on jobs and services to Canadians. The PBO is not, however, seeking any court order demanding the release of any specific documents.
Meanwhile the latest from the PBO gives
us this report which confirms what many of us have suspected for some
time.
Overall,
the independent budget office found that Ottawa's spending was
down 0.6 per cent through the first six months of the current fiscal
year, which ends March 31. Direct program spending fell four per
cent.But spending on internal services — such as communications, information technology, human resources and financial management — actually rose eight per cent. And the PBO report says capital expenditures, in large part driven by Defence spending, also climbed in the first half of 2012-13, up almost seven per cent.
Hmm 'communications' spending up,
spreading BS from the PMO must be expensive.........
Thank you Mr Page, I personalty wish
you well in your future endeavors I am sure you will have no
difficulty in finding a position in the private sector, it is our
loss and you will be sorely missed.
I leave you with this thought from
President Obama’s recent Inaugural Address, no less true for us than our neighbours to the south.
“Being true to our founding
documents does not require us to agree on every contour of life; it
does not mean we will all define liberty in exactly the same way, or
follow the same precise path to happiness. Progress does not compel
us to settle centuries-long debates about the role of government for
all time – but it does require us to act in our time.
For now decisions are upon us, and we cannot afford delay. We
cannot mistake absolutism for principle, or substitute spectacle for
politics, or treat name-calling as reasoned debate. “Support Democracy - Recommend this Post at Progressive Bloggers
1 comment:
The best candidate a PBO executive search committee could hope to find would be, well, a former PBO executive. That would be, of course Kevin Page. I hope he applies for the job.
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