pbi said:
Roger that. If we are honest, we can probably point to a few good things that have occurred largely because of media embarassment. We may not like the media but their power can help us.
We'll soon see cabinet erupting like a hornet's nest ...
Now that more and more vacationing Canadians are returning to work and asking "who was on duty while the PM and certain cabinet ministers were vacationing outside the continent?" (hmmm ... wouldn't it be amusing to ask if cabinet had a "leave plan" like most Army units ... ?)
And once again, from the perspective of civilian emergency management, there's nothing like a slap in the face from the media to galvanise government into action (and remember - the Liberals only have a minority government, thus they can't afford to lose the votes of all those Canadian voters recently arrived from this corner of the globe ...). Cynical? No. It's the hard reality of politics - very few politicians are trained or educated to deal with real disasters (kinda analogous to wars ...).
Ministers' absence draws fire
By Gloria Galloway, Thursday, December 30, 2004 -
The Globe and Mail
OTTAWA -- The two federal ministers in charge of co-ordinating Canada's response to the devastation caused by Sunday's tsunamis had their vacations cut short yesterday after questions were raised about their prolonged absence at a time of crisis.
Foreign Affairs Minister Pierre Pettigrew and International Co-operation Minister Aileen Carroll continued their holidays outside Canada after tsunamis smashed into 12 nations and left as many as 70 Canadians missing.
Their aides would not disclose their vacation destinations, but Mr. Pettigrew is believed to have been in Paris while Ms. Carroll is believed to have been on a trip to South America with her family.
Both trips ended after members of the news media placed calls yesterday morning to the office of Prime Minister Paul Martin, who is on vacation in Morocco, to ask who was handling the crisis.
Early in the day, France Bureau, a spokeswoman for Ms. Carroll, explained the minister had been in regular contact with members of her department and that there were no plans at that time for her to return.
"We discussed [an early return] yesterday, we discussed it the day before," she said. "For now we have been able to bring her up to speed and inform her of what's going on . . . as well as what her counterparts are able to do."
Ms. Carroll understands the magnitude of the situation, Ms. Bureau said, and "she wants to come back when the time is appropriate if there is a need here."
The Prime Minister's Office called reporters a short time later to say that Ms. Carroll and Mr. Pettigrew would be returning to Canada.
Mr. Pettigrew's spokesman, Sébastien Théberge, said the Foreign Affairs Minister decided to return on his own. "Due to the current situation in South and Southeast Asia, Minister Pettigrew has cancelled his holidays," Mr. Théberge said in an e-mail. "Minister Pettigrew has been involved from the first hour on how Canada [will] respond to the current disaster and relief efforts," Mr. Théberge wrote.
Conservative Leader Stephen Harper was critical of the ministers' absence. "Here we have the single biggest humanitarian disaster of our lifetimes and the government has basically been AWOL. And it's not any particular person being on vacation. It's that nobody seems to have been really engaged. And that's a concern," he said.
"This is a huge international humanitarian disaster but there also are a significant number of Canadians involved. It isn't just something going on in foreign countries."
Defence Minister Bill Graham has been on hand to act as government spokesman. He announced yesterday, on behalf of the Prime Minister, an increase in funding for the affected regions. He was asked several times about his missing colleagues.
"They have been in constant contact with their offices through their officials throughout this," Mr. Graham said. "They have decided it's appropriate to come back now . . . as we continue our efforts.
Mr. Martin, who issued a statement about the crisis yesterday, will return to Canada Saturday -- two days sooner than planned.