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
He also offers his thoughtful perspective of Stephen Harper’s last 10 years in his recent eBook, The Harper Decade.

Rights and Democracy: I say tomato, you say this has nothing to do with the Middle East

by Paul Wells on Wednesday, February 24, 2010 12:16pm - 220 Comments

Yesterday’s display of bulbous rubber noses and floppy shoes from the seven clowns running Rights and Democracy is wearyingly familiar in every particular.

Tossing a dart from across the room, I hit this passage, at random out of any number of others, to rebut: they write that the executive review committee “gave the former president repeated opportunities to meet and discuss the evaluation in Toronto, Ottawa or Montreal. He chose not to avail himself of those opportunities.”

Rémy Beauregard actually addressed that point in a long letter to the board of Rights and Democracy on Oct. 26, 2009. “With respect to the efforts made to accommodate the President for a meeting of the Committee,” he wrote, “it is important to clarify that of the 55 days proposed by the Secretary of the Board for such a meeting, the President indicated he was available for 45 of those days.”

Then why was there no meeting? Because, as I’ve learned when trying to seek comment from them, Aurel Braun and his pals can be difficult to pin down. The Executive Committee of the R&D board is supposed to meet four times a year. How’d that go in 2009? “In June 2009, the dates for these meetings were not set because some members were not sure of the days they would have to teach. The Secretary of the Board was mandated to hold an e-mail consultation to try to set a date that would be suitable for as many people as possible. Starting in early August, she proceeded with this consultation and offered fifteen possible dates for the meeting. None of the proposed dates was convenient.”

How handy now that Beauregard is dead and that my source for the above information, if an employee at Rights and Democracy, would be fired if discovered. So the Braun faction of the board can keep repeating their misinformation. The guy they’re heaping calumnies on is safely tucked away in his grave. I remain a minor inconvenience, but all they have to do is outlast me. Since Lawrence Cannon and the PMO are solidly in their corner, how long can this annoyance last, really? As the Taliban like to say, “You have watches, but we have time.”

And the Braun Bros. Blarney and Baleful Circus is really good at repeating misinformation. Accountability and transparency are the true issues,” they write. “A December 2007 report by the Department of Foreign Affairs’ Office of the Inspector‑General discovered “persistent … accountability … problems” with Rights & Democracy, which regrettably remain.” Well, I said on CTV’s Power Play with Tom Clark that Braun was brandishing a 2007 evaluation while ignoring a 2008 evaluation that showed substantial progress and good faith (“R&D’s programming is managed according to accountability principles and best management practices for the sector”). I’ve written that a half-dozen times here, and I know for a fact that the Braun Circus has many friends who read this blog closely now as part of their work day. I repeated it on TVO’s The Agenda With Steve Paikin on Friday night. And still this bunch refuses to ever mention the 2008 evaluation, and still this bunch claims the problems “regrettably remain,” and still this bunch hauls in an audit firm with a vague mandate which their own public statements define in contradictory ways. The staff is terrified that their due-process rights will be run roughshod. Who can blame them? Ask Rémy Beauregard. Oh, that’s right. He’s dead.

As to whether this is about the Middle East, please. Before I wrote a word about this mess, Gerald Steinberg wrote in the Jerusalem Post that this was all about the Middle East. I haven’t seen the angry letter from Braun correcting the record. Perhaps Braun hasn’t had time to write it yet. He’s a delicate flower after all.

I am going to very substantially scale back my writing about this issue. I have reached the point where I am wasting my breath. My consolation is that many tens of thousands of Canadians now see this charade for what it is; that this has turned into a very, very bad day at the office for all concerned, including a few strategic geniuses who thought they could narrow-cast their way to electoral gain while the rest of the country missed this story; and that I have managed to shine a bit of a light on some of the most squalid behaviour I have ever witnessed in 20 years as a reporter. I am so grateful to Maclean’s readers for following the details of this often-complex story.

Here’s that edition of The Agenda from Friday night, on which I was one of the guests. Do I look angry? Guess why.

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

    Paul, without you, this story wouldn’t have reached the heights it has in the English media. That in itself is a victory.

    This obviously isn’t just about R&D – it’s a bigger issue that will keep repeating in other instances until the damage becomes very difficult to repair. So, thank you for speaking truth to power on behalf of countless Canadians. Thanks also to Macleans for being a leading source of information on this issue thus far.

    I hope you will take a much deserved break and return with renewed vigor to pursue this file!

    • kcm

      Is this story getting good coverage in Quebec i wonder?

  • irwin block

    Paul
    Just watched the TVO exchange and it was powerful. Since you are doing such a great job on this issue, complex and sometimes convoluted as it appears, I would ask that you continue reporting on it. This is a really important story and nobody else seems to have as complete an understanding of its ins and outs as you.
    Regards
    Irwin

  • common man

    First of all, as someone who has avoided reading most of the endless, dreary posts on this matter, let me be the first not to congratulate Mr. Wells or beg him to continue. I look forward to seeing his talents displayed when he writes about more relevant topics.

    I`ll admit I have only seen the highlight package on this subject. I have limited knowledge on the activities of the R and D group over the past 22 years, but I`ll bet I know more than 99.7% of Canadians will ever know about this "arms-length " organization.

    • common man

      Here`s how I think most Canadians will view this story: You have just one of thousands of federal agencies staffed by world-class professional " public servants " and hangers-on like Ed Broadbent and Warren Allmand supplementing their MP pensions. The agenda and policies of this organization has been formed over the past number of years by strategic appointments by the gov`t in power. As a result, a new CPC gov`t observes them in action for a couple years and sees they are making poor decisions because of certain biases that have now become embedded in R and D. So rather then sit back and tolerate this behavior the gov`t is proactive and takes steps to change R and D so it is more in line with Canadian global philosophy. That is why we elect new gov`ts in our democracy. We are trying to achieve some balance in our institutions. Change is good. nothing to fear here.

      • no more non-partisan

        Most of the commenters are Paul's fans. Kind of talk radio for the cursive passive aggressive. They love democracy when they're in power and think it's all f*cked up when the other guys are in power. National daycare will complete them in a way that national health care just can't. Best just to walk quietly away and leave them to their thing. Paul will think of something else to throw their way that will get them going again. He has to keep up with Steyn in the comment generation contest. Rogers Media loves how much useless gigabytes they generate.
        BTW thanks Paul for all that you do.

      • FVerhoeven

        Although I do agree that Wells' efforts should be appreciated, I do agree with you, common man.
        I mean, good on Mr.Wells to look into this sort of dispute, but there are many instances of friction between government appointed bodies and governments of the day to be covered (would the appointed senate not be our prime example!).

      • FVerhoeven

        At the end of the day though, we have to be clear on what role an elected government must play and what role an opinion maker may play. Mr.Wells can no longer claim that his reporting on this issue was pure reporting. The cross-over into opinion making was real (or was at least a real possibility and perhaps for that reason he decided to step back) and since reporters AND opinion makers are not elected and are therefore not accountable to anyone, we need to be extra carefull in our assesments of open dialogue: One could become part of the story, rather than covering the story.

        The question surrounding prorogation was dealt with in a similar manner, I believe. It's good to have opinons but when the act of reporting slips quietly into an act of opinion making (and I'm not certain Paul had slipped into that transfer) we, the reader, better keep our eyes peeled or there will be no democracy left to speak of.

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

          In that case, who is more trustworthy with the facts:

          - someone who continuously seems to be holding something back, ignoring large facts (like the 2008 DFAIT report), makes some assertions that are demonstrably false/misleading/inaccurate and making personal attacks

          or

          - someone who presents not only their side of the argument but the entirety of the other side as well, asks more questions than proposes answers and has put up all of the facts that he has come across allowing us to decide for ourselves?

          • FVerhoeven

            I don't know who is more trustworthy with the facts. Either one could be playing with the meaning of being trustworthy.

            If the Access to Information (for being able to read reports etc) is the problem, then report on it, and keep at it untill that gets resolved or will be at least be fully out in the open (the denial to a request for instance)

            But don't tell me that only politicians have agendas to push forward. We all have agendas to push forward, including a reporter like Mr.Wells. But to whom is HE ulitmately held responsible?

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

            The ghost of Ted Rogers? ;)

          • FVerhoeven

            I do understand that Mr.Wells was trying to be helpfull by publishing some of the R&D staff's complaints (demands), but if such staff, under rules and regulations, do not have the right to publicly debate their plight, one must then wonder if Mr.Wells, by trying to be helpful, has also crossed a line of being a reporter to being a partisan within the ongoing debate. Now, if Mr.Well doesn't like the fact that R&B staff could not get their message across publicly, then he should have written more about that fact.

            Or would MacLeans, for instance, have no problem with staffers going public about woes inside MacLeans daily operations?Just think about that one for a moment………………..
            This is not simply about trust – or who is more trustworthy, even though you would like to spin it in that way.

          • kcm

            Because Macleans as an entity is exactly analogous to a gov't ngo. I like reporters having strong opinions…and that includes Styne, despite the fact i disagree with 90% of his opinions. Taking a stance, forming an opinion, after you have done due diligence to the known facts, is an entirely logical and desirable outcome. You don't like PWs conclusions…all the rest of your commentry is persiflage.

          • FVerhoeven

            For a moment I thought you were indeed replying to my post. But I've read your response twice and must come to the conclusion that you have not been able to grasp a thing I have stated:

            I do appreciate Wells' passion for journalist input after doing research etc, but that does not mean that he can arbitrarily change rules and regulations existing: if the R&B staff have a fudiciary duty to not publically fight their plight, then Wells should not think he can change that by trying to be "helpful" as a reporter in a debate. He's either fullfilling the role of a reporter or he is fullfilling the role of opinion maker. Or was he, at times, trying to be an Ombudsman?

            What if Wells talks out of school regarding MacLeans operations? Would that be considered his duty as a journalist? The authorities at MacLeans might like to differ……

          • kcm

            If the Maclean's board was trying anything close to the fim flam act of the R&D board, i would hope he would…however, the analogy just doesn't hold up. I don't see him as trying to change the existing rules, merely to shine a light in dark corners…for which he is rightly applauded in the main.

      • ahm

        I'd recommend against proposing how most Canadians will view anything. It seems to be a problem for anybody to thrust themselves as an Everyman, or that they have their pulse on the political zeitgeist of Canada; indeed, there's regional bristling at being lumped in with the West, or the East, or Quebec, or even within the same rough geographic area (e.g. Newfoundlanders aren't Maritimers). Certainly few people outside of my area code like to be considered a fellow Canadian in the same breath, for some reason I have yet to really fathom.

        Also, if the government of the day chooses to move its policy levers subtly and not grossly, that's their prerogative. But they have consistently stated that the reason for all of this kerfuffle is governance (i.e. transparency, accountability, fiscal propriety, and managerial best practices), and not so that "…it is more in line with Canadian global philosophy." If the reason is as you say, then this is not transparent, it is opaque. This is not accountable, it is deceptive. That would be as far from a best practice of any kind as it could be.

        • common man

          Not thrusting myself anywhere ahm. I just like to remind the folks on this blog that no matter how many times they reassure themselves they are the righteous crowd, there is a whole new world out there and it is my opinion that they have neither the time or energy to pick sides in an internal catfight in one of the thousands of gov`t agencies.

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

            No reassurance is necessary…perhaps the folks on this blog actually are part of the righteous crowd, and a small crowd it is.

            Have to agree that they are numerically overwhelmed (many times over) by folks who "have neither the time or energy to pick sides in an internal catfight in one of the thousands of gov`t agencies".

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/Jack_Mitchell Jack Mitchell

            Most Canadians don't follow hockey either.

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

            Also true, athough I'll hazard a guess that percentags of "folks that don't follow" are quite different.

            Btw, Canada just scored goal number 7 against Russia…

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/Jack_Mitchell Jack Mitchell

            I bet about 1 in 100 Canadians know what team's got the most points in the NHL right now. That's pretty low. The point being that you can't measure the importance of anything by how many people know about it.

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

            I am not suggesting that just because the troubles at R&D are only being followed by a relatively small number of Canadians the issue is not important. I believe that this issue is moderately important.

            I am acknowledging the reality that the volume and persuasiveness of the posts that you or I or tedbetts or whoever else is taking the time to add to these boards is going to have only a tiny impact on the significant portion of Canadians who don't follow politics and public policy as closely as you do.

            And I'll add that I do applaud your efforts to spread the word.

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/Jack_Mitchell Jack Mitchell

            And I yours, to be sure.

            You are quite right that we are very few — though my guess is that the average reader here is more influential in every way, from the Little Shop in the Diefenbunker to the engaged citizen in Kamloops, than the average voter. Still, I just think one can't measure anything by its immediate payoff; also, our democratic instinct is to think in terms of the total of all citizens, whereas in fact, in our nation of 33 million, there are probably 33 thousand who really care about politics, and they're the ones that really count when it comes to political issues. En avant!

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

            33,000? You're being generous by suggesting that stories like this are followed by one thousandth of the population. In reality, the number is closer to one ten-thousandth. However, enough of the "chattering classes" (of which I am a proud member, as you are) take this seriously enough to talk about it, which is more than can be said for most stories of its ilk.

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

            I lean towards Jack's guesstimate of 1 in 1,000 given that "following" means "read a newspaper at least a few times a week and will actually read an article or opinion piece about R&D past the third paragraph".

            Your guesstimate of 1 in 10,000 makes sense to me if "following" means "spends upwards of an hour or two a day following various web links and even posts a comment or two or more per day".

            At the end of the day which of those numbers is correct doesn't really matter that much: they are both quite a bit lower than I would prefer.

          • Dot

            Maclean's weekly circulation is listed in wiki as 350,000. Wells has written two stories on R&D there. In addition it was covered by CBC's the National at least once (~700,000), and in numerous stories elsewhere.

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

            The TV ratings on the USA-Canada game are lying?

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/Jack_Mitchell Jack Mitchell

            "Follow hockey" doesn't mean "tune in to the biggest game of the year"?

          • ahm

            I have tried to parse your reply but I'm still entirely unclear on your thesis. Perhaps you'd care to elaborate on what you mean by a whole new world, and why people on this blog have neither the time or energy to pick sides.

          • common man

            My poor grammer is the problem. The point I was making is that sometimes folks who spend a lot of time on blogs are under the mistaken impression that their fellow participants are an accurate cross section of society. But it is my opinion that people outside of blog commenters do not have the time or energy to agonize over the inner workings of a single gov`t agency. They did not have the inclination 5 years ago to comment on R and D policy and neither do they have now if that policy has changed.

          • ahm

            With all due respect, your grammar is not the issue. Your original comment stated that "So rather then sit back and tolerate this behavior the gov`t is proactive and takes steps to change R and D so it is more in line with Canadian global philosophy." Your reply to me was that you want to remind blog commenters that they are an elite. You've elaborated that people not on this blog, which you identify as outside this blog, do not have the energy or time to agonize about this internecine conflict. Germane to this is an argument you make in your original comment, "That is why we elect new gov`ts in our democracy. We are trying to achieve some balance in our institutions. Change is good." I cautioned you about positing a whole and coherent Canadian perspective that exists separate from the politics espoused here, as it is impossible even when quickly considered.

    • kcm

      Ah…the first shot across the bows…taking the world weary tack today…good idea, keep it low key…don't want to change Well's mind do we?

      • common man

        I seem to have more faith in Mr. Wells good judgement than you. I trust he will write about what is newsworthy when that time arrives. In the meantime this story has certainly been red meat to those around here who seem to require never-ending reasons to hate the CPC gov`t.

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

          "who seem to require never-ending reasons to hate the CPC gov`t.

          We certainly do not need Inkless for that as Harper and his vandals provide enough of those reasons all on their own.

          in fact we wish they would stop as we seen enough of our country and its formerly good international reputation destroyed.

        • kcm

          ' In the meantime this story has certainly been red meat to those around here who seem to require never-ending reasons to hate the CPC gov`t."

          Hey, if the board insists on behaving like clowns…then who are we to not enjoy the show?

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

        the world weary tack…LOL

    • Jan

      There's a highlight package?

  • kcm

    Of course…Chantal's on to it too!

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

    Like you said you "have limited knowledge on the activities of the R and D group".

    You should have stopped there.

    • common man

      To continue my thought that you started to quote " but I`ll bet I know more than 99.7% of Canadians will ever know about this…..organization ". And the reasons why this will remain an internal " civil-servant Montreal story " I have out-lined above. And the reason you love this story is because you hope that it might somehow tarnish the Harper gov`t.

      So you can disect and analyze this story forever and you can beg poor Mr. Wells to drive himself crazy with it, but there`s nothing there. It`s just like all your other phony-scandals. Times are changing Ted—you don`t have to be scared.

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

        Yes – of course. Nothing to see here. This is all but part of the never ending struggle of Liberals VS Cons. To prove this – all we really need to do is add "-gate" to something, and phony scandal it is. How about R&D-gate? I guess that is pretty lame. No wonder I'm not a Con spin-master…..

  • brooster

    As odious as the stench around this story seems to be, I hope Wells holds his nose and continues to sniff it out it. In the long game, Harper and his henchmen in the PMO are probably hoping to outlast the media's typically short attention span regarding these kinds of "incidents".

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

    Paul:

    Just watched the full TVO video. Again, thank you. In the video, between your comments and Chris Selley's comments, I've put my finger on what's really bugging me about this whole thing.

    Of course, Harper has the right as PM to appoint whom he chooses. He can even appoint people to override his own appointees as he has done here. Of course, Harper has the right as PM to change the policies and direction of government/quasi-government organizations. He can even change the policies and direction he had previously implemented as he has done here.

    As you put it though, he's implementing policy that goes much further than he would ever admit to in public. In fact, take KAIROS and Kenney as an example, they will go out of their way to say one thing and do (and say to select audiences) something else entirely. As Selley put it, they have all the right to do what they are doing and much of it many would agree with, so why are they doing so much of it in such an underhanded way, in the shadows of government?

    • Holly Stick

      Because they know the majority of Canadians would not like what they are doing?

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

      And of course, once you see the pattern of governing from the religious right more clearly in the light of day, you start to see a lot of it.

      R&D

      KAIROS defunding (interestinly, it too has significant ties to Steinberg and NGO Monitor

      <a href="http://tinyurl.com/yjm8pmc>Planned Parenthood defunding

      Pride event funding

      <a href="http://tinyurl.com/ykpezwv"Film censorship (Bill C-10)

      And that is only off the top of my head.

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

      And of course, once you see the pattern of governing from the religious right more clearly in the light of day, you start to see a lot of it.

      R&D

      KAIROS defunding (interestinly, it too has significant ties to Steinberg and NGO Monitor

      Planned Parenthood defunding

      Pride event funding

      Film censorship (Bill C-10)

      And that is only off the top of my head.

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

        I think that this whole "religious right" thing is an illusion that doesn't reflect reality. Harper's approach to governing is remarkably secular.

        Social conservatives (I am not one, btw) have almost zero real influence in this country. It's just convenient for Harper's opponents to pretend that they do. After all, nothing energizes the Liberal base more than the fantasy that they are fighting the good fight against fundamentalist Christian Republicans. It hardly matters that this myth doesn't correspond to objective reality, because people desperately want to believe that it's true.

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

          I think you're confusing "secular" with "not socially conservative". The two are distinct.

          It's entirely true that Harper's government is secular. It's not quite true that social conservatives lack influence within it.

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

            It's entirely true that Harper's government is secular. It's not quite true that social conservatives lack influence within it.

            I agree that they have influence with in it, but I don't agree that this influence has really manifested itself in tangible ways. I've already rebutted every single one of Ted's examples of the "pattern of governing from the religious right", and I hate repeating myself (but I will if need be).

            Gaunilon, what would you say is the most tangible manifestation of the influence of social conservatives in the Harper goverment? What initiatives can you point to? My opinion is that the influence can be shown not so much in what Harper does as what he doesn't do. For example, he announced an initiative to increase Canadian aid to women and children in the 3rd world in a way that turned out to be quite different from the way that Ignatieff would have preferred.

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

            Well I apologize for making you repeat yourself. I have to admit I haven't been following these R&D discussions very thoroughly and just happened to catch this comment at random.

            In answer to your question, I think you've got it mostly right. There haven't been many outright socially conservative initiatives, but there have been a number of cases where the CPC has held the line – not pushing things incrementally further left as the Martin and Chretien Liberals tended to do.

            There are a few things I could point to however, as outright social con initiatives: family-friendly tax breaks for example (e.g. tax credits for kids activities). Replacing the planned universal childcare program with the Universal Child Care Benefit (i.e. replacing a massive government takeover of childcare with, instead, help for parents who are caring for their children) was a huge victory.

            The recent 3rd world aid thing was a case of "holding the line", and a good one. It impressed me considerably.

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

            As an aside: this is exactly the dynamic currently playing out in the US over health care. The Democrat plan looks like it will finally fail after a year of struggle, and the reason for its failure is largely because of the three items I listed above together with the Dem leadership's inability to grasp that these concerns are held by an awful lot of perfectly ordinary people who wield a lot of collective power.

          • kcm

            Your post makes no sense…what has health care to do with: 1. small govt[ ok give you that], 2.freedom to…non sequitur, 3. not to b forced to …univerasal HC, much less Obama's watered down plan, is hardly egregiously wrong. 2:1 Your serve.

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

            Nothing to do with (2), I agree with you there. As to (3), the biggest obstacle to the bill passing the House is Stupak's bunch of pro-life Democrats who will vote down the bill unless it explicitly rules out any funding for abortion…i.e. killing an unborn child….which they (and I) view as egregiously wrong.

            That's what happened the first time it went through the House – Obama tried lying about it in the hope that no one would have time to read the bill, but Stupak called his bluff and demanded an a vote on an amendment that explicitly forbade all funding for abortion in the bill. To Obama/Pelosi's perpetual surprise the amendment passed.

            The same thing is going to repeat here, only Pelosi is probably going to block Stupak from bringing the amendment to a vote this time now that she knows it has the votes to pass. If she does this, the bill will probably get voted down.

          • Canuckistanian

            The Stupak amendment example cancels out your "1. small government" principle, as it is forcing private corporations to deny such a choice to their policy holders. A rather extreme example of government interference.

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

            It was not just that it was quite different from the way that Ignatieff would have preferred, although that ic clearly true. more accurately, it was quite different from the way that Ignatieff would have preferred and the way that social conservatives would have preferred CR (to the degree that it was being done at all). Harper did ensure the initiative would not cover practices that social conservative would reject.

          • Ted

            CR, you are right to call me on the "governing from the religious right". That was sloppy writing and I should be more precise. Publicly, he is governing from the centre as much as he can, no question. In the shadows of government, however, he is governing very differently. (By shadows, I just the areas of "government" that are not in the public eye, don't have public accountability in the same way, etc.)

            Publicly, Harper has declared that the Conservative Party is a pro-choice party. But then he guts Planned Parenthood.

            Publicly, Harper declares all programs must fit its guidelines or else no stimulus or foreign aid funding. At a private gathering in Jerusalem, however, one of Harper's closest and most important cabinet ministers says KAIROS funding got chopped because it supported an Israel boycott (a lie) and wasn't supportive of Israel. Flaherty gets caught saying arts funding was cut based on ideology.

            This is the macrocosm of governance that we are learning about from understanding the microcosm of R&D. It is a debate Harper doesn't want to have occur in public where he can be held accountable.

        • Holly Stick
    • http://intensedebate.com/people/ElectricTorch ElectricTorch

      It’s the oldest trick in the book: Get someone else to do the risky business, and diversify, diversify! This way, whenever things go wrong, you can wash your hands of the whole affair because the link back to you is a maze of facts and fiction. It takes someone like Paul Wells to do the hard work of highlighting the links and showing the pattern that emerges, but sadly, it’s so nebulous that the majority simply won’t understand until it’s too late.

    • FVerhoeven

      …because when they (PM Harper, Kenney et al.) try do so, they are countered by empty shoutings coming from all sides (have a good look at blog responses, for instance).

      However, give the Harper government , and PM in particular, a chance to have a reasonable debate on these matters, and they would come to stand under a very different light. So, if it is light you want, ask for reasonable debates and I think PM Harper would be more than happy to oblige (and he would be very capable of holding his ground).

      • kcm

        Empty shoutings… you aren't a fan of democracy are you?

        • FVerhoeven

          Very funny!

          You know, people keep talking about our democratic deficit but I would say that the lack of decent debates has brought us to that low low point.

          My grandfather, a very wise man, used to say:" 100 empty heads do not add up to more than one empty head."

          I used to listen to him, that's why I don't have an empty head, you see!

      • Canuckistanian

        isn't that the whole point of this matter? harper doesn't want this debate as it may backfire, so he works the edges to please his base.

  • guest

    Paul, you are one angry dude. Take a breath.

    • no more non-partisan

      Paul has "gone Ezra" on us.

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

        A little bit of "Ezra" isn't necessarily a bad thing…..100% "Ezra", well that's too much for more me.

  • common man

    Here`s the problem with tb`s criticism of Harper`s efforts to change the direction of gov`t agencies: If he feels that Harper is being underhanded in his approach to these changes then he should be able to show us the public consultation etc. where the previous policies of R and D including KAIROS were deemed worthy of Canadian policy. But no there was no public input back then. The difference now is that Harper is PM and tb`s reaction is strictly sourgrapes.

    I wonder if Mr. Wells has questioned the motives of the usual suspects around here who have been tripping over each other in praising his yeoman`s work on this story.

    • kcm

      "I wonder if Mr. Wells has questioned the motives of the usual suspects around here who have been tripping over each other in praising his yeoman`s work on this story.'

      Right! Because us posters are just sooo powerful…i wasn't aware my vote was worth more than yours.

  • no more non-partisan

    Now you know exactly how we felt during Chretien's government. We feel your pain.

    • kcm

      Yeah, it's a pity all the board members who's behaviour we're complaining about are cons [ bar one] and all appointed by Harper…anyone would think we were just partisans or something. Proof positivive that liberals care nothing for good governance.

  • Joops

    Paul, thanks for your excellent work on this. Please continue to follow this story when you can. Your work on this issue is the main reason I keep coming back to the Maclean's site.

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

    "I have reached the point where I am wasting my breath."

    Actually Paul, you reached that point quite a while ago.

    R&D has an annual budget of $11 million, Hmmn, so it's costing me (and all Canadians) about 30 cents.

    So this is a pissing match between some pompous academics and some self-righteous bureaucrats. Sorry, not engaged yet.

    "some of the most squalid behaviour I have ever witnessed in 20 years as a reporter"

    Really Paul? I can't help but think you might soon change your mind about that. But if it really is amongst the worst you've seen in 20 years, then we really do live in a great country.

    The one truth is that it is very sad that Mr. Beauregard died.

    • Amateur Hour

      And that Aurel Braun and Lawrence Cannon have yet to exhaust their lies.

  • Canuckistanian

    Kudos on your reporting on this Paul. A job well done.

    I didn't think you came across as angry on TVO, just well-informed and incisive. Keep up the good work.

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

    in the spirit of PeterTong:

    Going to quiet down , now eh? Who got to you Inkless? That's what I want to know?

    • Iccyh

      I'm glad to note that you are the one who posted this, considering.

      Nice job.

      • kcm

        It's a clever ruse on PW's behalf…the pmo is popping the corks as we speak. "Wells is off the job." they cry! but we know he's waiting in the weeds, merely recalibrating. Any moment now Braun's going to give a press conference denouncing him as a liberal patsy.

        • http://intensedebate.com/people/Jack_Mitchell Jack Mitchell

          Part of me wishes Braun gave more press conferences: they're highlights of this soap opera. But part of me appreciates their rarity value, like the alien visitation scenes in Twin Peaks.

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

            Huh. After the fourth episode or so I just figured every TP character was an alien…

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/Jack_Mitchell Jack Mitchell

            Ah, you should watch it on DVD, much easier to follow.

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

    Please keep on this Paul. Your insight is wholly appreciated!

  • wsam

    Let's be frank and admit that until the new board of R&D admits they totally love Statan there is really no way to assess what happened.

    Until Remy Beauregard rises from the dead we have no choice but to believe he was treated honourably by the latest round of Conservative appointees. But alas, we remain unable to pierce the veil of death. Allow me to quote Shakespeare: My kingdom for a horse.

    So, I’m not surprised, that sticking my fingers in my ears and singing la la la la la have stymied my laborious efforts to comprehend this reality. A reality which the fingers I have in my ears combined with all the singing has rendered quite inaudible. I repeat: I am stymied.

    And you sir, Paul Wells, you have taken your little inquiry as far as possible without obtaining transcripts of Stephen Harper’s thoughts. Until these transcripts are uncovered we can only assume sunshine, magic ponies and applesauce. Anything else we have no choice to assume as partisan noise.

    Also, I have trouble pooing.

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

      That is actually not the only thing we can assume is going on in Harper's head.

    • Dot

      Let us know when you get past the first level. Set your goals low. Then you can be an over-achiever. Don't even think of trying to own the top of the podium.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Maslow%27s_Hier…

      • wsam

        Constipy,

        Dude.

        I'm on your side. I agree.

        Until we discover a way to read their thoughts we should be sceptical about what the board was trying to accomplish in its hounding of Beauregard and the staff of R&D. Anything else is just plain old connecting-the-dots journalism and should be dismissed if it doesn't meet my pre-conceptions.

        We have to be vigilant in our scepticism and give the Board the benefit of the doubt.

        Hopefully the Deloitte subterfuge, smokescreen, futile exercise in measuring the immeasurable, will delay things long enough everyone forgets what this was about.

        I nominate the new board to go on a management retreat to learn how to be nicer to their staff. Which was really the only thing going on here.

        • OnTheJob

          "Also, I have trouble pooing. "

          Grownups talking grownup stuff here, kid; beat it.

          • wsam

            You already are beating it. I can tell.

          • Dot

            Note to pw [and to childish wsam if he missed it]:

            As you were saying "I will not have this comment board turn into the toilet most other news organizations' comment boards became long ago."

            http://www2.macleans.ca/2010/02/22/the-witness-ha…

          • wsam

            WHaaaaaa!!!

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/jmckinnell Jonathan McKinnell

            Hi WSAM and OnTheJob,

            Lighten up on the personal attacks please. If you have something to say about the issue or something about the point a fellow commeter was trying to make then say it. No need for school yard level verbal bullying.

            Consider this your first warning and only warning.

            Thanks,
            Macleans.ca

    • Holly Stick

      Incidently, the Battle of Bosworth has been found a ways away from where they thought it was; and they think they've found where Richard lost his horse in the marsh and was killed fighting valiantly:

      http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2010/feb/19/bat…

  • Holly Stick

    You can also google Marci Mcdonald for her article in a certain magazine whose name seems to get comments deleted.

  • Kaplan

    Wells: I understand due to time constraints and other responsibilities that you need to step back a bit. But the bigger, and more important story, is about the realignment of society by the Harper government, which you've already written on. Hope you're still able to chip away at that.

    • FVerhoeven

      realignment of society…….you mean as opposed to "static" societies

      • kcm

        The realignment out of the public and parliamentary spotlight actually.

  • Jim O

    Many thanks for your excellent work.

  • kcm

    Enjoy your mental holiday PW…hopefully your colleagues can pitch in…i see they already are…go team Macleans go!

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

    Paul, you have put in an amazing amount of effort here. Thank you, and thank you to macleans.ca for offering this tribune to the people.

    I suspect your thesis is bang on (to the extent that I have been keeping up and can dare to digest your thesis): Harper and his entourage are indeed changing institutions by stealth where they can, perhaps in part because they would rather not have it all out in the open (the dreaded "hidden agenda" thing), and perhaps in part because they are frustrated in other domains by the minority government situation preventing them from living up to their non-hidden agenda. And this paragraph may even be more sympathetic to the Conservatives than they deserve.

    As a small-C conservative who sees government dollar after government dollar sprinkled just about everywhere, my preference would be to just shut this (and so many other) thing(s) down, rather than commit our kids' wealth to all these things we are not prepared to actually pay for ourselves. Just because it sounds like it would be nice in no way means governments must start it up and feed it in perpetuity. So go ahead and shut stuff down.

    But then just go and shut it down. This sort of poisonous kneecapping is ridiculous. And it must be exposed. So I thank you again for all you've done here. I hope your announced step-back is a mere head fake and that you still have the fire in the belly to keep an eye on things. It doesn't seem like this story is over. Not by a long-shot.

    I look forward to youtubing the TVO piece.

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

      Well said, MYL. I agree completely. (Maybe not the small-c conservative part–unless it means fiscal conservative)

  • illbethejudge

    Paul,
    While I understand that you have other things to write about and have hammered this story at considerable detriment to yourself, I hope you will reconsider. This is a very important story that is about more than just one NGO. The staff at R and D have done their part and arguably, you have done yours. The rest of the media have followed you precisely because you were like a dog with a bone. So, while I recognize that this can't be a mission and certainly not a a singular mission, please keep doing updates as warranted.
    If they silence you, they've won. They have no right to win when you are on the side of right. I will remind you of the old adage "don't pick a fight with people who buy ink by the barrell". You may be "inkless", but you still have that power. No matter how much this government sticks its fingers in its ear and sings "lalalalalalala", it's still true. You have used that power responsibly and for decency throughout this saga, I hope you continue.

  • Simon Kiss

    Paul, please, please, please, please do not let this go. You have an important task here and you are performing an absolutely vital public service.

  • New Inkless Fan

    A small consolation Paul is that you have raised the standard of Canadian investigative journalism and in the process gained many new dedicated readers of any subject you report.
    Personally I have never observed such dedication to logic and skill at debate – while maintaining professionalism – in Canadian journalism.
    Your future stories will now have that much more effect.

  • JamesHalifax

    Paul Wells wrote:
    "I have managed to shine a bit of a light on some of the most squalid behaviour I have ever witnessed in 20 years as a reporter"

    Paul, is it an accident that you didn't mention some of the most squalid behaviour by Canadian Reporters in the last 20 years? Because frankly, some of the garbage I have seen in the Canadian Media is well beyond what I have seen any politicians produce.

    Or do you not bring up the failings of your fellow journalists? I'm sure you know many who have deep seated Left wing views, which affect their selective reporting. (Ormiston, Julie Van – Dusan, James Travesty, Jeff Wimpson, Harron Siddiqui, etc……the list is long)

    No wonder the blogosphere has more respect and trust amongst its readers.

    • Holly Stick

      Look over there, a shiny object!

      • JamesHalifax

        Sorry Holly……that's just the reflection of your tinfoil hat from your monitor.

        Now, shouldn't you be worried about the Joooss? Er, Zionists?

      • Jan

        Nothing shiny about James, he's dull to the core. He does appear to be very loyal, however.

    • ahm

      You disagree with Wells on what is the most squalid behaviour observed in the past 20 years, that's clear. However, it's his article and his writing: it is no accident that he has not written about events you consider to be tantamount. Moreover, your use of insulting parodies of reporters' names puts you in that same ignore bin as those lovely commenters who insist on referring to Harper as "Harpie", "Stevie", "Harpo", and the like. Finally, your last sentence is foolish, as this is a blog and thus part of the blogosphere. I look forward to your replies, which I imagine will be vitriolic, accusatory, and lacking logic. I can only hope that your rhetoric will be colourful and your invective original, that it will not be a read as excruciating as it is dull and inane.

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