Christy Clark helping out Stephen Harper's political refugees |
BC Liberals
running 'witness protection program' for ousted political staff.
Bill Tieleman’s 24
Hours Vancouver / The Tyee
column
Tuesday March 22, 2016
By Bill Tieleman
"Conservative:
A statesman enamoured of existing evils, as opposed to a Liberal, who wants to
replace them with others."
-
Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary, 1911
Dozens of
frightened refugees have been given political asylum by B.C. Premier Christy
Clark, after losing all they held dear in their homelands.
But these
aren't Syrians or citizens fleeing other beleaguered nations -- they are
Conservative staffers from defeated right-wing governments in Ottawa and
Alberta who have found a welcoming home with the BC Liberals.
Clark is
providing the political equivalent of a witness protection program for
political staff who lost their jobs after the Conservative governments of
Stephen Harper and former Alberta premier Jim Prentice were rejected by voters.
Clark is
relocating the operatives and offering them the chance to shift their
ideological identities from Conservative to BC Liberal.
In the
process, she risks upsetting the balance her party has achieved by uniting
federal Conservatives and centre-right federal Liberals.
And Clark
risks alienating new Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as he sees the
Harper hatchetmen and women who trashed him now working on her team.
How smart is
it to risk offending Trudeau's team, the people deciding how much federal
infrastructure money will come B.C.'s way? Clark may find out in today's
federal budget. But in any case, her Harperization of the BC Liberals is
already well underway.
Pacific Political Report,
a subscription-only magazine published by conservative political observers Will
McMartin and Kristy Fredericks, broke the story in December when it reported on
the first of a long list of Conservative staffers from Ottawa and Alberta named
to key positions in Clark's government.
Among them:
Sebastien
Togneri: The former
aide to ex-Conservative public works minister Christian Paradis was the centre
of controversy
and forced to resign after The Canadian Press reported he ordered a media
freedom of information request "unreleased."
Togneri was
investigated by the federal information commissioner, who found he had
interfered in several access to information files without any legal authority.
Togneri was
again the focus of unwanted attention when he was found to be working on the
2011 federal Conservative campaign in Alberta while still under investigation
by the RCMP in connection with the FOI request.
Togneri was
dumped from the campaign; the RCMP investigation ultimately found no charges
were warranted.
Togneri was
executive assistant to B.C. Energy Minister Bill Bennett as recently as
December, but is now working in
Morocco doing "political
party training" for the International Republican Institute, a
non-profit chaired by U.S. Sen. John McCain, the former U.S. Republican Party
presidential nominee. The IRI slogan is "Advancing Democracy
Worldwide."
Vanessa
Schneider: An
ex-staffer for federal Conservative cabinet ministers Gary Lunn and Denis Lebel
and also an ex-Fraser Institute staffer, Schneider is now communications director
for Peter Fassbender's provincial ministry of community, sport, cultural
development and TransLink.
Jay
Denney: The
ex-communications director for federal Treasury Board minister Stockwell Day is
now chief of staff to B.C. International Trade Minister Teresa Wat.
Nick
Koolsbergen: Harper's
former issues management director drew attention when he started monitoring
Senator Mike Duffy's trial
during the August federal election campaign and Harper faced questions about
whether Koolsbergen had acted improperly after he was spotted talking to a
witness.
"Look,
these are matters before the court and we don't interfere in them," Harper
told CTV, while a Conservative campaign worker stated that "Mr.
Koolsbergen was there to take notes, just like everyone else."
Now
Koolsbergen is executive director of the BC Liberal government's corporate
priorities and communications operations office -- in other words, part of the
spin machine.
Rosa
Ellithorpe: The former
caucus director for the Alberta Conservatives is now research director for the
BC Liberal caucus.
Emily
Woods: Jim Prentice's
former $133,000-a-year press secretary
was appointed executive director, communications operations in the advanced
education ministry last year.
Those are
just a few of the political refugees who have found not just shelter, but
highly paid jobs with the BC Liberal government.
Others with
strong Conservative backgrounds now working
in the B.C. government include Derek Cummings; Josh Stewart; Kent Verge; Bill
Anderson; Martyn Lafrance; Jessica Faddegon; Zoe Kierstad; Nathan Clark; Carter
Mann and Anish Dwived.
These
political refugees also have a mission, and it's decidedly partisan.
As Pacific
Political Report put it: "Much -- if not all -- of their work
over the next year will be to help the Clark government and the BC Liberals
prepare to win re-election in May 2017."
So if you
heaved a giant sigh of relief at the defeat of the Harper Conservatives and the
forced retirement of their right-wing crew, think again.
Because the
only former Conservatives not working in the BC Liberal government appear to be
those who haven't yet applied for a job.
PS: Only in
B.C., you say? Last week I noted in a column
about integrity that BC Liberal Party executive director Laura Miller had
resigned in December after police laid breach of trust and mischief charges
against her related to her previous role in the Ontario Liberal government.
Police
allege she was involved in deleting emails related to a scandal involving a
decision to scrap two gas-fired power plants.
Last week
the BC Liberals reinstated
Miller, with Clark saying she has "a right to employment just like most
other people do when we consider them to be innocent."
Miller said
her legal defence plan is in place and she's ready to rejoin the BC Liberal
Party.
"I'm now
in a place to return to work and get busy on leading our strong and determined
team as we build our 2017 campaign."
And so it
goes in B.C.
.
1 comment:
Christy Clalk is not a refugee from Harper, she i a partner.
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