Inkless Wells

Inkless Wells

Inkless Wells

Paul Wells on all the latest out of Ottawa—along with the occasional post about jazz. Follow Paul on Twitter: @InklessPW

Peter Donolo and the Curse of the Mummy's Hand

by Paul Wells on Wednesday, October 28, 2009 11:34am - 171 Comments

It is always interesting (well, to geeks anyway) to see how a prime minister’s communications director decorates his office. They spend so much time shaping someone else’s identity that it’s instructive to see how they express their own. Kory Teneycke had three laminated political posters — a vintage Reagan Morning In America; a PM for PM poster from Preston Manning’s unsuccessful run for leader of the Canadian Alliance; and a Libranos parody poster (Chrétien and Gagliano photoshopped into a Sopranos family shot) from the Ezra days of the Western Standard — along with a World War II morale poster with the slogan, Attack on Every Front! Francie Ducros had only a huge map of riding-by-riding results from the 1995 Quebec secession referendum. Peter Donolo, famously, decorated his office with huge posters from classic Hollywood movies. (Even older Ottawa veterans than I will be needed to remember what the movies were.)

I don’t know whether Donolo has seen The Mummy’s Hand, a jaunty little Universal horror flick from 1940, but I’m going to bet he did. I have been thinking a lot about that movie’s opening sequence lately, as I contemplate the mess the Liberal Party of Canada — not only Michael Ignatieff, but the whole organization — has gotten into. The Mummy’s Hand opens with a long vignette about erased memory. So, lately, has the Liberal Party.

As I’ve pointed out before in a column, Michael Ignatieff is the fourth Liberal leader since Jean Chrétien retired in 2003: that’s four in six years (if you count Bill Graham, and you should, because he was interim leader for about as long as Ignatieff has been leader). Before that, how long did the Liberals take to go through four leaders? Thirty-five years, from Trudeau to Chrétien (counting Herb Gray). And before that? Eighty-one years, from Wilfrid Laurier to Lester Pearson. So the rate of churn, if we can put it that way, at the top of the Liberal party has accelerated beyond anything in its history.

With that rate of change comes a loss of personal memory. Jean Chrétien had been a Member of Parliament for 23 years (and out for four) on the day he became Liberal leader. Paul Martin had been an MP for 15 years. Stéphane Dion for 13 years. Ignatieff for three years, kind of, depending how you count it.

With that loss of personal memory comes a loss of institutional memory. Each new Liberal leader has seen fit to substantially purge his predecessor’s office. Ignatieff’s people held most of Dion’s in perfect contempt. Dion’s replaced Graham’s, who had conceived their role as one of filling in and hadn’t prepared for the long haul. Graham’s filled the vacuum when Martin’s board gave up. Martin’s board purged Chrétien’s staff (precisely one person, Paul Corriveau, worked in a political role in both the Chrétien and Martin PMOs.UPDATE: I’m told this excellent point  is, unfortunately, not very close to being true. Sorry ’bout that.)

The Mummy’s Hand opens with an extended vignette set in Egypt 3000 years ago. The crown prince, Kharis, discovers the secret of eternal life, but he is found out by the emperor. For his impertinence Kharis is buried alive in a secret location. Then the slaves who buried him are murdered by other slaves so the secret will never get out. I do not believe the Universal Pictures scriptwriters were offering management advice, but the Liberal Party of Canada has spent six years faithfully adopting the method of the Hollywood Egyptian emperor.

Ignatieff is a rookie who has been advised by rookies as he tries to lead a party whose bywords have been chaos, constant upheaval, and a stubborn eagerness to prove to the Canadian people that they were wrong to vote against the Liberals in 2006. Ignatieff, like Dion, has preferred to re-offer policies from the late decadent phase of the Martin era (Kyoto, Kelowna, pink books, daycare, doubling the Canada Council budget), apparently hoping they will do better this year than they did in the last two elections.

Donolo is a popular glad-hander with the Chrétien crew’s keen understanding that hierarchy matters in an organization under pressure. The endless supply of bright twentysomethings who work for Ignatieff had better brace themselves: they are about to get jobs, with defined responsibilities. (A Chrétien-era staffer asked one of the bright twentysomethings what he does for Ignatieff. “I apply a political lens to everything,” he was told. “Ah,” the staffer recounted to me later, “so he means he does nothing.” That’s over now.)

Donolo’s arrival is no guarantee of a miracle. What matters most to a staffer’s success is the leader he works for. Paul Martin’s board, in the end, amplified Martin’s personality rather than correcting for it. Dion attempted a shakeup, bringing in Johanne Sénécal a year into his tenure, but she had no mandate to change the rest of his office and she could not change the way he thinks and behaves. The leader of the Liberal Party is still Michael Ignatieff, and the absurd gong show that surrounded the leaked-and-denied-but-true-yet-unready news of Donolo’s hiring was pure Ignatieff. But Donolo corrects, if only partially, for the constant failure of the last four Liberal leaders: he has seen a Liberal win, and he does not think the lessons from that time are beneath his contempt. He knows what victory looks like. That makes him the freshest possible face in a party that has become deeply dependent on forever re-enacting the habits and attitudes of losers.

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  • http://intensedebate.com/people/jolyon jolyon

    "not only Michael Ignatieff, but the whole organization — has gotten into. The Mummy’s Hand opens with a long vignette about erased memory. So, lately, has the Liberal Party"

    I have been thinking about this and I wonder if it's due to generation before baby boomers retiring and now boomers have taken over. Boomers have issue with authority – particularly the ones who join Libs/NDP – and they have become the 'don't harsh my mellow' or 'speaking truth to power' party. Boomers and those born after them don't know how to behave and they have no sense of the long game. Everything is now, now, now or me, me me.

    Cons don't have this particular problem because they are more accepting of hierarchies. I wonder how young un' who applied "political lens to everything" will react to having a proper job.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/s_c_f s_c_f

      I really agree that the Liberals have shown absolutely no ability to think strategically in the long game. They keep shooting themselves in the foot for short term gain that in the long run will hurt them. They've reached the point where it's nearly impossible for them to get a seat in Man/Sask/Alb because almost every position they've taken for many years has not been in accord with the popular sentiments in those provinces.

      It's gotten so bad that Iggy wanted to take down the government without having a reason for it.

      I really think that most of the votes they've been getting since 2000 are knee-jerk Liberal votes. As they lose those votes, they will be hard-pressed to get them back for a long time.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/BCVoiceOfReason BCVoiceOfReason

    Mr Donolo:

    When were you first made aware of the adscam funds financing the Liberal party?

    What communication strategy did you advise Mr. Chretien to follow?

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/BCVoiceOfReason BCVoiceOfReason

    [polldaddy 2181034 http://answers.polldaddy.com/poll/2181034/ polldaddy]

  • tobyornottoby

    Here's a radical idea:

    Maybe the Liberals, assisted by Donolo, could actually propose some alternatives, maybe on Afghanistan, or H1N1 or climate change or anything. To be fair they did dust off their old daycare policy, but being afraid to put out policies just because the Green Shift didn't work is conceding every issue (or action an any issue) to the Conservatives who are quite happy to have a thin legislative agenda.

  • delshilo

    Correct me if I am wrong, But wasn't Mr. Donolo the Chief of Staff during Chretien's Adscam years. If so what did he know about it? Peter Donolo was always on CTV for his Strategic Polling (which never mirrored the other polls) it seemed they always had the liberals higher then other polls. Anyway just my thoughts.

    • Mulletaur

      Is that the best the Little Shop of Tories can come up for a talking point ? How pathetic.

    • Anon Lib

      You guys SERIOUSLY need to get over Adscam, which was a minor league scandal by any objective standards. Get a sense of historical perspective people…or international perspective.

      I mean what's next? Do Libs attack Cons over the Pacific Scandal? Or tainted tuna? Or go on about Chuck Cadman for the next two decades? What is it with Con voters and not being able to let go of stuff? It was the same thing with the National Energy Program. The stupid thing was three decades ago and barely last more thna a copuple of years but the whining and complaining and victimhood lives on forever.

      Go buy yourselves adult-sized pacifiers and get over it you bunch of big babies.

      • Orson Bean

        For the sake of the Liberal Party of Canada, I hope you're not writing their press releases and talking points for the next election. Reminds me of something this Wells fella said once: angry people don't win arguments.

      • Chris

        Regarding the NEP. Here in Alberta, approximately 200,000 people lost their jobs in a space of two months. That worked out to about 20% of the population. With the sky high mortgage rates of the era, tens of thousands of homes were abandoned. Suicide rates sky-rocketed.

        Imagine if Ontario today lost 2,000,000 (million) jobs in TWO MONTHS. Not like today's recession that has killed about 750,000 over the course of ONE YEAR.

        We in Alberta will never forget the NEP. I'm sorry that our harping displeases the rest of you so much.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/hollinm hollinm

    Donolo would be wise to pay attention to the history lesson offered by Paul Wells here.

    There is an old saying that….you never can go back.

    With the hiring of Donolo the Libs once again are trying to desperately find a saviour.

    Donolo was effective at a time there was no real effective (no) opposition and he has been out of partisan politics since 1999. This is now 2009 and things have changed on the scene in Ottawa.

    Donolo is not dealing with Preston Manning and the Reform/Alliance and a dying PC party. He is dealing with a seasoned, formidable opponent in Stephen Harper and his political machine.

    The problem for the Liberal party may have been to some degree the advisers but the real problem is a feckless leader who lacks political experience and who appears to have no common sense. He has made so many gaffes that there is insufficient room to describe them here. You can't blame the advisers for all of them.

    So we will see how effective Donolo is at changing the game in Ottawa. If he does it will be nothing short of a miracle because Canadians have made their decision about Iffy and it will take a miracle to change the minds of many Canadians.

    • kcm

      Love how Canadians gets conflated with conservatives. Then again…$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

  • Dot

    Do any share your love of Alberta mortarboards?

  • Mulletaur

    Do you intend that those from Toronto are unable to understand the problems of those outside of Toronto ? Or that those who live in Toronto have never lived outside of Toronto ? That perfectly illustrates why this geographical obsession is pure nonsense.

    • Orson Bean

      I lived in Toronto for many years and count many dear friends from there. I have nothing at all against the place. I was merely making the common sense observation that if the senior people, and the MPs, of any political party are unduly populated by people from a single city or region, that can be problematic. Especially in a country as geographically large as Canada. Reform/Cdn Alliance had the same problem, and remember how spectacularly unsuccessful they were at winning seats in Ontario. If you want to pretend this is not a problem, go ahead. At your peril, I say.

      • Mulletaur

        Does everybody who comes from the same place necessarily have the same worldview ? the same understanding of the world ? offer the exact same solutions ? The only thing that anybody should be judged on for any job is how well they do it, not where they come from, what race they are, what religion they are, what sex or sexual orientation they are, what age they are, etc. Should political staffers have an understanding of problems in every corner of the country ? Absolutely. Is that guaranteed by drawing on staff from different parts of the country ? Absolutely not. Is it excluded by drawing on people from one particular city or region ? Equally false.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/s_c_f s_c_f

      Yes, while some problems are the same, many are different. For instance, there are not a lot of farmers or hunters in Toronto. There are not a lot of Inuit. Nor are there are a lot of fisherman, forestry or oil rig workers. I'm sure that these various groups of people have issues that require the attention of politicians. And I'm pretty sure that a group of people that live and work in Toronto would need a long time and a lot of work to understand what those issues are, and even then might not fully understand.

      Not only that, people from the same areas tend to form the same opinions. It's no accident that Toronto is almost entirely Liberal while Calgary is almost entirely Conservative. This simply shows that your location tends to influence your thinking, because you tend to adopt the same ideas and opinions of the people that surround you.

      • Mulletaur

        So what does that say about people who go to Ottawa, like MP's ? I'm not saying you're wrong s_c_f, just that what you say implies that those who we delegate with our decisional sovereignty are subject to the same groupthink pressures as everybody else. Does that make them less effective as MP's ?

        • http://intensedebate.com/people/s_c_f s_c_f

          No, all I'm saying is that it really does help to select an inner circle with representation from outside of Toronto. I agree with you that it should not be the foremost consideration, but it should be a consideration.

  • mike

    it's like bringing Cito Gaston back to manage the Jays because he won in '92 and '93.

    good luck with all of that – this ain't White, Alomar, Molitor, Carter and Olerud. it's Rae, Holland, Goodale, Iggy, and Jennings.

    not quite the same thing.

  • mike

    yeah, they're shaking…lol

  • Fred – Brandon MB

    I'm hoping that the Liberals are too dumb to get rid of Kinsella. Kinsella has an acid tongue and a vile demeanour. He rubs most everyone the wrong way, especially with his blind partisanship. He abandons all logic or decency when he is trying to fling dirt on the opposition. He makes John Baird look like Ghandi.

    • Mulletaur

      Fear eats the soul, eh Fred ?

    • jarrid

      Well I have a certain respect for Kinsella political skills, but he is a bit of stick in the mud these days. His website is just plain depressing. Negativism, arrogance and there's a certain yesterday's news feel about him. Like time has passed him by.

      What I would say though is that the Liberal talent pool is hardly foreboding. This is a party mired in the past and going nowhere fast. And Mulletaur, the Conservatives respect the Liberals because of their zombie-like ability to come back from the dead, but do the Liberals inspire fear? Not anymore.

      • Mulletaur

        I for one still like the taste of brains. We'll see.

  • Ted

    Absolutely.

  • Fred – Brandon MB

    John Manley would be embarassed to be part of the current Liberal Party. Probably part of the reason he isn't.

    • Mulletaur

      Manley is still a member of the Liberal Party of Canada as far as I know. But you're right, his leadership aspirations have been laid to rest.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/TwoYen TwoYen

        Given his new private sector position, I would be highly surprised if Manley is a member of any political party. His new job requires him to be non-partisan.

  • gar

    Okay tell me didn't Iffy replace Dion to accomplish all the things that he is now hiring a new Chief of staff a pollster. The Canadian voter must think he is watching a replay of Monty Python.These guys should realize they blew it in their rush to replace Dion without a leadership convention. The Prince should have abdicated a long time ago.they have put their party back to at least two more elections.For the press to make out this new guy is dynamite .His score as a pollster could not touch Nick Nanos.wait until the Conservatives bring out their big weapons and start disclosing more of Iffys private life before politics.Oh Yes one other thing didn't Paul Martin do this new Chief of staff In before he saved John.

    • kcm

      "…wait until the Conservatives bring out their big weapons and start disclosing more of Iffys private life before politics"

      Can't wait… let's all get back into the gutter again!

      • Orson Bean

        "Can't wait… let's all get back into the gutter again! "

        . . . as opposed to the principled, gentlemanly brand of politics practised by Iggy advisor Warren Kinsella.

  • orval

    The curse on the Liberal Party is CPC minority government. The Liberals need a long period in opposition without the imminent prospect of an election every five minutes. The energy (and money) being spent on election readiness is preventing any energy being devoted to rebuilding and revamping the party and its policies,even its raison d'etre. Perhaps this is what Ignatieff wanted with his Sept 1 election threats. The Liberal Party needs to be decisively defeated. A suicidal "scorched earth" defeat would blast away all the old Liberal accretions and bad habits and allow a fresh modern next-generation Liberal party to emerge from the ruins of the old discredited, rejected "I'm entitled to my entitlements" past.

    I heard Kinsella say on Clark's show tonight that he is willing to "walk out into the mist" to save the party. If he means it, this is exactly what has to happen. Kinsella and other Liberal fossils like him have to go.

    Maybe Ignatieff realizes now that to reboot to the new LPC, the old LPC has to be put out with the trash.

  • Mulletaur

    Comments are doing strange things again.

  • Mike

    I think this is an excellent decision. Donolo will bring much needed adult supervision to the office. He was also known as being pragmatic rather than overtly political and this can only be a counter balancing philosophy to the negativity of the Cons. Congrats Peter and good luck. Listen to this man please, for us all.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/hollinm hollinm

    The fact is that Donolo was Director of Communications, not Chief of Staff. I suspect both jobs are quite different. So the expectations being placed on Donolo are high and therefore none of us should be surprised when he is unable to herd the cats in the caucus and in the party into a cohesive unit.

    It is one thing to be the DofC for an old political pro like Jean Chretien and quite another when you are dealing with someone with no political experience at al.

    So the Libs need to be caution about raising expectations too high. That maybe too late listening and reading the various pundits and columnists.

  • Mulletaur

    The comment counter shows 141 comments, yet no comments load. I have updated Firefox and Java as well as cleared my cache – any suggestions ?

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/HarveyMushman HarveyMushman

    Is the problem that Ignatieff is a puppet who just needs the new master Donolo to pull the proper strings?

    Or is the problem that Ignatieff has such poor judgment and skills (both political and people) that he needs Donolo to save him from himself?

    I suspect that examining Ignatieff's record of poor decisions, followed by the (often lauded; "proof of leadership") "tough decisions" to remedy them …suggests the latter theory is the most viable.

    Either way…not an enviable position to be in for someone who aspires to lead the country.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/HarveyMushman HarveyMushman

    Mine was doing the same…then suddenly the other messages popped up when I refreshed.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Crit_Reasoning Crit_Reasoning

    What happened to all the comments?

  • Orson Bean

    I found that front-page story in today's Globe ("Canada can meet its climate goals, but the West will write the cheques") to be very interesting in this LPC-CPC context. That could be a tempting opening for the Liberals — go very hard on Kyoto, basically demonize Alberta (which would be crack-cocaine-tempting to the LPC Trudeauite old guard), pit Central Canada against the West on this issue a la Trudeau-Keith Davey, and ride to victory. Of course, the key difference from the Trudeau era is that little thing called the Bloc . . .

    But in the dream scenario for the Liberals, it could see the Tories reduced to a Western rump. Disastrous for national unity and makes for one uber-nasty, bitter campaign, but of course that never bothered Trudeau and Davey, as long as they got the keys to 24 Sussex . . .

    • Mulletaur

      I don't know why Conservatives automatically assume that anybody who was an admirer of Trudeau is automatically anti-Alberta, it's just not true. After all, it was Trudeau's National Energy Program and the massive investment of Canadian taxpayers that created the tarsands.

      • Orson Bean

        The point of my post was not that anybody who was/is an admirer of Trudeau is automatically anti-Alberta. Part of the point of my post was simply that the LPC has quite a history of pursuing policies, and designing political and campaign strategies, which curried favour with Central Canadians, often at the expense of Western Canadians — particularly Alberta. Trudeau and Keith Davey's campaigns may have been the high water mark in that regard — especially the 1980 campaign. "Screw the west and take the rest" was the colloquial name for the strategy. It was, of course, based on the electoral arithmetic of the time (before the BQ came along and threw a bit of a wrench in the works) — if you take the Lion's share of the seats in Ontario and Quebec, you can win without winning a single seat west of Ontario. And that's pretty much what the Liberals did. Are you going to try to rewrite history here and claim that that wasn't Trudeau and Keith Davey's craven, cynical strategy?

  • Neil

    As if we really care who this Donlo person is, as well as his lot in life……. The vast majority got much better things to do.

  • http://solopiano2.wordpress.com solo piano

    big backlash against harper next election, just watch.

  • Curt

    I think the Liberal troubles can be made clear by putting up a map of Canada on yhe wall. They will see that they are nearly shut out from Manitoba to BC. Every body knows this but what are the Liberals going to do about it? Look after the farmers? Nope! Look after the oil and gas producers? Nope! look after the forestry? Nope.
    They the Liberals are going to look after esoteric items such as day care, enviroment and social welfare issues rather than day to day issues that will allow ordinary Canadians to get on with life.
    How can Toronto/Montreal decision makers begin to understand what the rest of Canada is all about when Canada is so much more?

  • kcm

    Still plenty of libs in BC.
    Farmers and forestry workers don't have kids, need welfare occasionally or care about the environment?

  • Orson Bean

    Still plenty of libs in BC — in the City of Vancouver proper and immediately surrounding 'burbs (North Shore, Richmond). But the NDP are also quite competitive there. Outside of those areas, in the rest of the Province, it's a boneyard for the Liberals.

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