Posts Tagged ‘power list’

The 25 most important people in Ottawa

By John Geddes, Paul Wells, Jonathon Gatehouse, Julie Smyth, Aaron Wherry and Michael Petrou - Tuesday, November 27, 2012 - 0 Comments

The Maclean’s 2012 power list

Ask around about the attributes of influence in the federal government during Stephen Harper’s rule. The answers will vary widely depending on who’s doing the talking, but certain elements will pop up with intriguing regularity. Just about everyone, for instance, agrees that power these days tilts westward. And, sure enough, the top three on our list—the Prime Minister himself, inevitably, followed by the chief justice of the Supreme Court and the governor of the Bank of Canada—all hail from Alberta.

Yet Harper had little to do with the rise of Beverley McLachlin and Mark Carney. So is this top-of-the-list cluster of Albertans mere happenstance, or a true sign of a pattern of power? One thing it isn’t, we promise, is a contrivance. Maclean’s writers and editors compiled this admittedly subjective list based on our own combined experience covering Ottawa’s most important people, tested against the sage insights of political strategists, veterans of the public service and lobbyists who make it their business to size up the city’s elite.

What makes one partisan or public servant, public figure or private power broker seem to matter more than another can be mysterious. In some cases, managerial style lifted a figure into our sights, like McLachlin’s subtle touch with the nine egos on the top court, or the way top bureaucrat Wayne Wouters boosts the morale of a public service whose pinnacle he commands. Often power flows in well-worn channels, as through the offices of the finance or foreign minister. Sometimes, though, someone cracks the institutional edifice, and influence streams in unexpectedly. Look at what Kevin Page has done as the first parliamentary budget officer. Continue…

  • INTERACTIVE: The 100 most powerful buildings in Ottawa

    By Nick Taylor-Vaisey - Friday, November 23, 2012 at 5:10 AM - 0 Comments

    Ever wonder where Ottawa’s most powerful people toil away? Ever been curious about where the country’s top politicians, lobbyists, watchdogs, judges, journalists, bankers, bureaucrats, diplomats, cops and spies spend their days? Behold: our map of the 100 most powerful buildings in the nation’s capital.

    • BLUE: Political offices
    • RED: Federal departments
    • PURPLE: Appointed power
    • YELLOW: Newsrooms
    • TURQUOISE: Lobbyist offices
    • MAGENTA: Embassies
    • GREEN: Gatherings
    • BLACK: Cops and spies
    • DOTS: Power eateries
    • ORANGE: Mixed tenants

    A bird’s eye view of the city’s downtown core demonstrates some pretty clear patterns. Most political power, not surprisingly, emanates from Parliament Hill. Most newsrooms congregate within a couple of blocks of the Hill. Most government watchdogs lie west of Bank Street. Federal departments surround the city’s core, and dominate downtown Gatineau across the river, too. Queen Street, right in the middle of the action, stands out for its variety of powerful tenants. Beyond the core, law enforcement and security organizations enjoy larger campuses. And in Rockcliffe Park, some of Canada’s most powerful politicians maintain residences.

    Photos by Nick Taylor-Vaisey, with some exceptions. Photos of the Sir Leonard Tilley Building, Canadian Security Intelligence Service Headquarters and Royal Canadian Mounted Police Headquarters courtesy Google Street View.

  • Maclean’s celebrates clout and commitment in the halls of power

    By macleans.ca - Thursday, November 22, 2012 at 12:04 PM - 0 Comments

    Behind the scenes of the Power List and the annual Parliamentarian of the Year awards

    PHOTOGRAPH BY CHAD HIPOLITO

    “Corridors of power” was a phrase first coined by British writer, scientist and government bureaucrat C.P. Snow in his 1956 novel Homecomings to capture the sense that political power is as much a locale as an expression of democratic authority. Power in a democracy may originate from the ballot box, but it can be found in ample supply wherever important decisions are made and influence wielded. (That Snow later reused his famous phrase as the title of a subsequent book suggests he knew he was on to a big idea.)

    It is with the task of uncovering and explaining Canada’s current corridors of power that Maclean’s proudly presents our first-ever Power List, featuring the 25 most important people in Ottawa.

    There’s no single formula or method for determining who wields power or influence and who does not. To compile our unique list, Maclean’s unparalleled team of reporters, columnists, bloggers and editors leveraged their knowledge of how the capital operates and worked their contacts to discover who gets heard, who gets their way and who can make things happen. The results may come as a surprise.

    As ought to be expected, there is power to be found around the federal cabinet table. But power also exerts itself in bureaucrats’ offices, on the dais of the Supreme Court, in embassies, schools and private corporations, at radio-station studios and even in the handling of the Prime Minister’s daybook.

    A mere 10 of Ottawa’s 25 most powerful people are elected officials. Of these, only five sit in cabinet. Beyond a few opposition MPs with equally high profiles, such as Thomas Mulcair, leader of the official Opposition, and putative Liberal leader Justin Trudeau, plus a few public servants with obvious clout—Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney, for instance, and Supreme Court of Canada Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin—the bulk of our list comprises people many Canadians will not have heard of.

    Few Canadians would be able to recognize Treasury Board secretary Yaprak Balticioglu, Mulcair’s chief of staff Raoul Gebert or Conservative party director of operations Jenni Byrne. Yet all three confidently stride Ottawa’s corridors of power. Fame and power are two different concepts. You can have one without the other.

    In fact, it is not even necessary to work in Ottawa to make the Power List. Two members of our list—radio host David Rutherford and oil-patch lobbyist D’Arcy Levesque—hail from Calgary. Consider it further evidence of the shifting gravity of power in the Harper era. And influential government critic Alex Himelfarb is director of the Glendon School of Public and International Affairs at York University in Toronto.

    In many ways the Power List, with its focus on spotting the influencers in Ottawa, serves as a necessary companion piece to our sixth annual Parliamentarians of the Year awards, which were presented this week at a gala ceremony in Ottawa.

    This year’s Parliamentarian of the Year is Green party leader and Saanich-Gulf Islands MP Elizabeth May, who’s recognized for her efforts in bringing a unique and compassionate perspective to the rough-and-tumble world of the House of Commons. She thus joins previous honourees Bob Rae, John Baird, Jason Kenney, Bill Blaikie and Ralph Goodale in elevating the discourse in Ottawa. (Unlike the Power 25, MPs themselves decide on these awards. In each category, every MP votes for one member of their own party plus one member from another party, with the scores weighted accordingly.)

    Other highlights from our 2012 awards include 30-year-old Manitoba NDP MP Niki Ashton, who went from second runner-up last year to winner of the Best Represents Constituents category, as well as Preston Manning, former leader of the Reform

    party, who received a Lifetime Achievement award. (See “Parliamentarians of the Year,” for the full list and coverage of the event.)

    Where the Power List is dominated by unelected officials who make things happen behind the scenes, our Parliamentarians of the Year awards recognize the unsung efforts of elected officials. The life of a federal MP is tough work, with endless travel, massive briefs and rigorous public scrutiny. Honest, hard-working and credible politicians are the lifeblood of democracy and Canadians are fortunate to have so many on display in Ottawa. We’re pleased to salute this year’s winners.

    Together, the Power List and Parliamentarians of the Year awards are two more ways in which Maclean’s delivers unmatched coverage and insight into the inner workings of Ottawa and its many corridors of power.

From Macleans