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Trying to catch lightning in a bottle

A daily look inside Canadian politics and power.
Aug 25, 2023 View in browser
 

By Kyle Duggan

PROGRAMMING NOTE: Ottawa Playbook will not publish Aug. 28 through Sept. 4. We’ll be back in your inboxes Tuesday, Sept. 5.

Thanks for reading Ottawa Playbook.

In today's edition:

→ More sparks to fly as STEVEN GUILBEAULT heads East.

→ DONALD TRUMP breaks the internet.

→ Farewell to KEITH SPICER, Canada’s first official languages commissioner and one heck of a writer.

DRIVING THE DAY

'We have set a new course. Now it is time to deliver,' Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault said at COP15 last December. | Graham Hughes l The Canadian Press

CHARGED TRIP — Pretty soon it’s wheels up for self-described lightning rod of criticism STEVEN GUILBEAULT, on his first trip to China as environment minister.

He’s headed to rep Canada as the first Cabinet minister to travel to the country since pre-pandemic times at the annual meeting of the China Council for International Cooperation on Environment and Development (known by its acronym-soup moniker in bureaucratese as the CCICED, or simply the China council).

And if one thing is certain, more lightning bolts will be hurled his way over the trip.

Guilbeault, also the executive vice-chairperson of the organization, travels Aug. 26-30 to Beijing for its annual meeting. He’s set to cheerlead for climate change cooperation and the biodiversity framework agreed on last December at COP15, a deal that Canada helped broker.

— What it does: The organization advises the Chinese government on environmental issues.

A statement posted by the Conservative party notes DING XUEXIANG, right-hand man of President XI JINPING, serves as its chairman while also sitting on the Communist Party’s Politburo.

“For Ding and the CCICED, the interests of Beijing’s Communist Party come first,” it charged.

A statement from Guilbeault’s office maintained it serves as an independent “forum to advance policies and practices that prevent pollution, protect biodiversity and combat climate change within China.”

— Small slice of the saga: The coming China trip quickly became a magnet for criticism after it was unveiled, following months of drama over Canada’s relationship with Beijing after a spate of scandalous incidents during the past few years that have rankled Canadians:

→ The two Michaels.

→ Foreign interference, for which a public inquiry is reportedly on the near horizon.

→ The targeting of Conservative MP MICHAEL CHONG and his family, and the subsequent disinfo campaign leveled against him.

— What the critics say: Columnist TERRY GLAVINdescribed the organization in the National Post as “a comical disco-era relic from the days when it was almost possible to believe the Chinese Communist Party’s promises about behaving like a civilized member of the global community” while its GHG emissions have rocketed over the past two decades.

PIERRE POILIEVRE tweeted, “Having a cabinet minister work for that dictatorship on ‘environmental’ policy while he shuts down our industries & taxes our energy is outright betrayal.”

Conservative foreign affairs critic MICHAEL CHONG posted the Trudeau government is “lending Canada’s good name to Beijing and giving it the veneer of respectability of doing something on climate change.”

— The defenders say: Guilbeault’s office calls the criticisms hypocritical, pointing to former Conservative Environment Minister PETER KENT being the organization’s former exec vice chair.

Canada provides no funding to the government of China, according to a statement from Guilbeault’s office, which noted funding to the organization has remained relatively consistent since the early 2000s.

Liberal MP TERRY DUGUIDresponded to Chong: “Disengaging with China on environmental issues is a bad idea. Think about the success we had achieving a biodiversity deal in Montreal at COP15 along with China.”

— Not alone: JOHN KERRY held a China bilat recently, pushing for U.S.-China climate cooperation that could ease tensions between the two countries. Nothing concrete came of the talks, which attracted as much domestic political criticism from Republicans. U.S. Commerce Secretary GINA RAIMONDO will also be in China at the same time as Guilbeault.

— Other players involved: INGER ANDERSEN, head of the United Nations Environment Programme and former Deputy Prime Minister of Norway KRISTIN HALVORSEN are both vice chairs.

—The agenda: The meeting kicks off Monday with speeches by the executive vice chairpersons, under the general theme of a green transition for “high-quality development modernization in harmony with nature."

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TODAY'S HIGHLIGHTS


— Prime Minister JUSTIN TRUDEAU speaks at the Global Environment Facility’s Seventh Assembly at 4 p.m.

— Deputy Prime Minister CHRYSTIA FREELAND is in Ottawa for private meetings.

10 a.m. Ontario Liberal leadership candidate and MP NATE ERSKINE-SMITH will reveal his health policy platform — and receive a formal endorsement from MPP-elect KAREN MCCRIMMON.

WHO'S UP, WHO'S DOWN


Up: Central Okanagan Emergency Operations officials, for their clear and informative press conferences this week that reassured an anxious public and helped create a sense of camaraderie.

Down: Anyone who fell for one of the many social media hoaxes claiming Canada’s forest fires were started intentionally by misrepresenting a video clip of a helicopter starting a controlled burn.

THREE-RING CIRCUS

INDICTMENT — Former U.S. President DONALD TRUMP arrived at the Fulton County Jail on Thursday to surrender to Georgia authorities and be booked in the criminal case involving efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election.

A grand jury in Georgia indicted Trump and 18 others last week on racketeering and other charges. POLITICO's KIERRA FRAZIER has details.

She also notes that Trump's mugshot is breaking the internet. The former president was quick to tweet the image with a link to a fundraising site.

Former President Donald Trump steps off his plane as he arrives at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, on Aug. 24, 2023, in Atlanta. | Alex Brandon/AP Photo

DAVID SHRIBMAN writes in The Globe and Mail:"The appearance of a one-time president of the United States at Atlanta’s Fulton County Jail would ordinarily be a moment of enormous national uneasiness; instead Mr. Trump’s various legal battles have become routine, and the 45th president considers his arrests a badge of honour, even of potential martyrdom. That is only one reason the country has been rendered dizzy."

In related POLITICO coverage: 

— JOE NAVARRO, an ex-FBI agent who specializes in decoding human behavior, watched the first Republican primary debate. He reports: “The real story had no words at all.”

— Who came out on top? Our colleagues in D.C. asked around 

— BRIAN MOYLAN recaps reality TV shows for Vulture. Enlisted by POLITICO to cover the GOP debate, which he dubbed “Trump’s Apprentice,” he writes: “A debate is just like a reunion special: Everyone has their rehearsed lines and soundbites planned, hoping to become a meme.”

— On today's episode of Playbook Deep Dive, debate moderators, MARTHA MCCALLUM and BRET BAIER, discuss which candidates surprised them; and what they wish they had done differently.

What’s next: The second Republican primary debate will be held Sept. 27. The exact time is TBD.

MEDIA ROOM

— A team from The Canadian Press reports that B.C. fire crews temporarily pulled out after protesters tried to "overwhelm" an RCMP blockade.

— When JEROME POWELL, chair of the U.S’s Federal Reserve, speaks at its annual shindig in Jackson Hole today, he could signal whether he’s ready to perform a major shift. "The world is watching," write POLITICO's GEOFFREY SMITH and CARLO BOFFA.

— Heritage Minister PASCALE ST-ONGE tells the Globe's MARIE WOOLF that she has held productive talks with executives at Meta.

— PAUL WELLS’ latest Substack: “Meet the CPC convention speakers. A leading Brexiter and a cancelled ex-general. What's up with that?”

— Over on The Line, RAHIM MOHAMED makes the case — with a reference to “Succession” — that Treasury Board President ANITA ANAND is the prime minister’s “pain sponge.”

— Liberal House Leader KARINA GOULD tells LAURA RYCKEWAERT of The Hill Times about her aspirations for Question Period. “I want us to answer respectfully, to answer factually, to make sure that we are putting our best foot forward.”

— Economist TREVOR TOMBE shares on The Hub: Lessons for Canada from the U.S. credit downgrade.

— GERRI SHARPE, president of Pauktuutit Inuit Women of Canada, tells Nunatsiaq News about fleeing Yellowknife: “You couldn’t see the sun,” she said of the wildfire smoke. “It was black.”

PROZONE


If you’re a subscriber, don’t miss our latest policy newsletter from ZI-ANN LUM: What’s next for C-18? More study

OLIVIA OLANDER reports: Unions fret over what AI could mean for jobs.

In other news for Pro subscribers:

— U.K. to host global AI safety summit on Nov. 1-2.

— 6 new countries to join BRICS, including Iran and Saudi Arabia.

— U.S. seeks end to WTO "judicial rulemaking".

— EU shrugs off threat from Inflation Reduction Act — for now.

— USTR tiptoes toward panel request in Mexico energy dispute.

Playbookers


HBD to CIVIX CEO LINDSAY MAZZUCCO and Sen. PETER HARDER. Also celebrating: CONRAD BLACK and retired senators JACQUES DEMERS and LISE BACON. Starbucks’ PSL is turning 20.

HBD + 1 to ANTHONY KOCH.

Weekend birthdays: Athlete and advocate RICK HANSEN, NDP MP RANDALL GARRISON and former premier BRIAN PECKFORD.

While we’re away: Former PM PAUL MARTIN will be 85 on Monday. Also celebrating: Former MP MARK EYKING (Wednesday), CLAIRE SEABORN (Thursday), Sen. JUDITH SEIDMAN and Cabmin GUDIE HUTCHINGS (Friday).

Send birthdays to [email protected] .

Spotted: PETER MACKAY, finally free of a C$1.7 million debt from the 2020 Conservative leadership race. "It was not easy, to say the least," he tells the CBC's CATHERINE CULLEN.

A sneak peek at the next issue of Policy magazine.

Journo CATHERINE GRIWKOWSKY sharing the definition for “Gish gallop” … In French, Conservatives branding Clean Fuel Regulations’ impact at the pumps as the “Trudeau-Blanchet tax.”

Liberal MP MANINDER SIDHU in Chicago meeting Rep. SEAN CASTEN as well as World Business Chicago executive ADRIENNE TONGATE and ex-U.S. ambassador to Canada DAVID JACOBSON.

Former environment minister CATHERINE MCKENNA, urging the PM to organize a climate science briefing for Canadians. 

SPIDERMAN,CAPTAIN AMERICA and other Marvel silver age compendium comics up for auction on GC Surplus, currently listed at a steal — possible remnants from SCOTT REID’s time in PAUL MARTIN’s PMO, exhumed from a dark corner of a government basement.

Movers and shakers: Foreign Affairs Minister MÉLANIE JOLY has named NATALKA CMOC as the next Canadian ambassador to Ukraine, succeeding LARISA GALADZA. Cmoc, a Ukrainian speaker, was previously director general at Public Services and Procurement Canada in the science and parliamentary infrastructure branch.

Media mentions: Business reporter CHRISTINE DOBBY is leaving The Toronto Star to join Bloomberg Canada to cover the financial sector.

Farewells: KEITH SPICER, Canada’s first official languages commissioner and former Ottawa Citizen editor, has died at 89, ANDREW DUFFY writes.

— In his own words: Spicer wrote about his first day on the job as languages commissioner in 1970 in a way few officers of Parliament ever would:

“Asked to raise hell for a cause I deeply believed in; paid to take on extremists, and to harry to reform powerful politicians and bureaucrats; handed carte blanche to define and incarnate an unprecedented post as parliamentary ombudsman — such fun should have been illegal.”

TRIVIA


Thursday’s answer: “Some chroniclers say the fighting lasted four hours, most maintain it was closer to two,” JOHN DANIELSKI writes of the Battle of Bladensburg. “What is not up for debate is that after the Americans were defeated, the British captured and burned Washington, D.C.”

Props to DOUG RICE, FERNANDO MELO, ROBERT MCDOUGALL, ANJUM SULTANA, GEORGE SCHOENHOFER and BOB GORDON.

Today’s question: “The streets of the city as we entered were like a combined Mardi Gras, Fourth of July celebration, American Legion convention and New Year’s Eve in Times Square all packed into one,” DON WHITEHEAD of The Associated Press wrote on this day in history. What was he describing?

Send your answer to [email protected]

Think you have a harder trivia question? Send us your best.

Want to grab the attention of movers and shakers on Parliament Hill? Want your brand in front of a key audience of Ottawa influencers? Playbook can help. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how: [email protected]

Playbook wouldn’t happen without: POLITICO Canada editor Sue Allan, editor Emma Anderson and Luiza Ch. Savage.

 

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Maura Forrest @MauraForrest

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POLITICO Canada @politicoottawa

 

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This post first appeared on Test Sandbox Updates, please read the originial post: here

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